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Understanding ASEAN - An Alternative Approach to Understanding ASEAN - An Alternative Approach to
International Relations Theory in Asia International Relations Theory in Asia
Ryan Grimstad Driver Portland State University
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Recommended Citation Recommended Citation Driver, Ryan Grimstad, "Understanding ASEAN - An Alternative Approach to International Relations Theory in Asia" (2018). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 4436. https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.6320
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Understanding ASEAN
An alternative approach to international relations theory in Asia
by
Ryan Grimstad Driver
A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the degree of
Master of Science
in
Political Science
Thesis Committee: Bruce Gilley, Chair Lindsay Benstead
David Kinsella
Portland State University 2018
© 2018 Ryan Grimstad Driver
i
Abstract
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) was originally formed in
1967 by five members as a means to promote peaceful relations and prevent the spread of
communist influence within their sovereign states. Since then the regional organization
has doubled in size and now includes communist states amongst its membership as it
seeks to establish itself as a strong economic and political hub for the greater region as
two large military powers, China and the United States, vie for hegemonic influence. The
American presence in the region must be governed by a firm understanding of ASEAN’s
unique nature and goals. When compared to other regional organizations that formed
over similar time periods, such as the European Union, ASEAN has not taken a cohesive
path with less of a firm timeline for integrating institutions as it instead continues to
reshape its policies in small iterative steps to evolve to the changing world.
If our existing paradigms of the role of regional organizations do not match with
the structure of ASEAN, we must establish a new toolset in order to guide future policies
for involvement in the region. This thesis seeks to provide a clear description and thus
understanding of the institutions and behavior of ASEAN as a regional organization. The
questions posed include whether ASEAN conforms to the institutional and behavioral
predictions of the major paradigmatic approaches to international theory, namely realism,
liberalism, and constructivism. The thesis begins with a brief history of ASEAN over
four distinct phases and an overview of regional organizations and international theory.
The three dominant theories are then analyzed in their application to ASEAN in the areas
of security, economics, and human rights.
ii
Conclusions are drawn that each of the three theories has its value for descriptive
insight, but all fall short in creating a holistic understanding of ASEAN. Therefore, I
propose a new way of describing ASEAN as a reactive, isomorphic, and anti-fragile
regional organization. The potential of this approach is that it utilizes tools latent in the
existing theories to examine ASEAN’s nature.
iii
Table of Contents
Abstract ................................................................................................................................ i
List of Abbreviations ......................................................................................................... iv
Chapter I: Shaping a Flexible Paradigm ..............................................................................1
Chapter II: Background and History of ASEAN .................................................................4
Chapter III: Regional Organizations and International Relations Theory .........................11
Chapter IV: Questions and Research Design .....................................................................25
Chapter V: Is ASEAN a Realist Security Community ......................................................37
Chapter VI: Is ASEAN a Liberal Economic Community ..................................................69
Chapter VII: Is ASEAN a Constructivist Rights community ............................................82
Chapter VIII: ASEAN as a Process .................................................................................105
Chapter IX: Implications for U.S. Policy Towards ASEAN ...........................................125
References ........................................................................................................................138
iv
List of Abbreviations
ACCT - ASEAN Convention on Counter-Terrorism
ACSC - ASEAN Civil Society Conference
ADMM - ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting
ADMM-Plus - Ten ASEAN member states, and eight Plus countries, Australia, China,
India, Japan, New Zealand, ROK, Russian Federation, and the United States.
AEC - ASEAN Economic Community
AFTA - ASEAN Free Trade Area
AHA Center - ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on Disaster
Management
AHRB - ASEAN Human Rights Body
AICHR - Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ Intergovernmental Commission on
Human Rights
APEC - Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
APF - ASEAN Peoples’ Forum
APSC - ASEAN Political and Security Community
APT - ASEAN Plus Three: ASEAN, China, Japan, and South Korea
ARF - ASEAN Regional Forum
ASC - ASEAN Security Community
ASCC - ASEAN Social and Cultural Community
ASEAN Plus Six: ASEAN, Australia, China, India, Japan, New Zealand, and South
Korea
ASEAN - Association of Southeast Asian Nations
AU - African Union
CSCE - Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe
CSO - Civil society organizations
EU - European Union
FTAAP - Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific
v
HADR - Humanitarian Aid/Disaster Relief
IGO - Intergovernmental organization
IMF - International Monetary Fund
IR - International relations
MERCOSUR - Common Market of the Southern Cone
NATO - North Atlantic Treaty Organization
NCPO - National Council for Peace and Order
NORAD - North American Aerospace Defense
R2P - Responsibility to Protect
RCEP - Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership
RHRM - Regional human rights mechanism
RIGO - Regional intergovernmental organization
RIT - Reactive isomorphic theory
SEATO - Southeast Asia Treaty Organization
SPDC - State Peace and Development Council
TAC - Treaty of Amity and Cooperation
TPP - Trans-Pacific Partnership
USD - United States Dollar
VAP - Vientiane Action Programme
WPS - Women, Peace and Security
ZOPFAN - Zone of Peace, Freedom, and Neutrality
1
Chapter I: Shaping a Flexible Paradigm
In August 2017, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) celebrated
its fiftieth anniversary. Over its history ASEAN has accomplished two important goals by
maintaining peace between ten diverse nations and the establishment of free-trade
agreements between them. Since its formation the regional organization has evolved itself
and its goals repeatedly as it seeks to adapt to the everchanging regional needs, and yet
when compared to more institutionalized organizations such as the European Union (EU),
ASEAN remains a loose collection of states each with their own cultural identities,
values, and objectives. This is not a collection of like-minded states who seek greater
levels of unification with the aspiration of establishing a more cohesive union, but rather
separate states that see more to gain from cooperation than competition. The benefits
come from reducing risks of conflict between members, maintaining strength of
sovereignty by strict rules of anti-interventionism, and increasingly greater economic
benefits from free trade agreements.
The important role of the organization is underscored by the increasing level of
commitment the United States has placed on its diplomatic involvement. In 2010
President Obama opened an ASEAN mission in Jakarta and followed that with hosting
the ten heads of state at the first summit held in America in 2016. These efforts were to
culminate in the formation of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a multilateral free
trade agreement between twelve nations that was to come to fruition in 2018 had the
United States, having elected Donald Trump to office, not withdrawn leaving the region
scrambling to push through a different initiative. While the enthusiasm towards the
2
region has lessened under the Trump administration’s more detached approach to foreign
policy, the region nonetheless remains critical to global trade. Before it was eclipsed by
the TPP, ASEAN had put forward the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, a
pact which is returning to high level talks as China, putting its weight behind the deal, is
stepping in eagerly to fill the gap left by the United States in the region.
Economically and politically this region is of great significance and its priority
needs to be placed higher in United States foreign policy. To do so though, policymakers
need to have a greater grasp on ASEAN and what its own aspirations are. Unfortunately,
academic scholarship to date has failed in this regard as the dominant international
relations theories seek to impose restrictive narratives upon what role a regional
organization must play. Existing work is governed by narratives without accounting for
the regional cultural and political values when they do not align with the paradigms of the
established theories. As realism, liberalism, and constructivism do not serve to accurately
explain the whole of ASEAN’s institutions or behavior, a new approach is necessary in
this instance. ASEAN’s reactions today do not predict future actions of the organization.
It has frequently altered its scope and purpose, though it has served as an indicator of the
political mindsets throughout the greater region. The theory that I will establish over the
course of this paper, views the institution not as a traditional regional organization but
rather as an organic entity driven by regional, state, cultural, and social values that are
constantly evolving. Pushing our understanding of the association towards in new
directions, avoiding the traps of being constricted into a dominant focus on security,
economics, or norms as with the other schools.
3
Over the course of this paper I will seek to analyze the capabilities of realism,
liberalism, and constructivism when applied to the study of ASEAN, and establish that
there are fundamental gaps in their application to this region. I will lay out a foundation
of a potential candidate for a new approach to be used in order to gain a greater
understanding of the goals and motives throughout Southeast Asia. In Chapter II I will
give a brief history of ASEAN, separated over four distinct phases in its timeline. Chapter
III will be an overview of regional organizations and international theory. Chapter IV will
summarize how the dominant international relations (IR) theories apply to ASEAN and
layout my research design. Chapters V-VII will be a deeper analysis of the existing
theories when attempting to study ASEAN. Chapter VIII will seek to establish a potential
new approach for the study of regional organizations. Finally, Chapter IX focuses on the
value of this line of research for American foreign policy in Southeast Asia going
forward.
4
Chapter II: Background and History of ASEAN
Southeast Asian Organizations
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations was not the first regional
organization in Southeast Asia. The Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) was
formed in 1954 as part of the United States’ anti-communist ‘Truman Doctrine’ of
creating collective defense treaties. This organization was, in comparison to the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, organizationally weak and suffered from internal divisions
until its dissolvement in 1977. The Association of Southeast Asia was established in
1961, focusing on economic development, and consisted of Malaya, which included
Singapore, the Philippines, and Thailand. The formation of ASEAN was at a tenuous
time for the region. By 1967 Singapore had only recently separated from Malaysia, which
still had tense relations with Indonesia after three years of low-level conflict; Malaysia
was also at odds with the Philippines over disputed territory. The American presence in
Viet Nam was ramping up significantly as the war escalated. There was skepticism from
Western scholars about the durability of the association given that between the founding
members there was no common language shared between them, nor any religious or
cultural ties to establish a common identity. Yet the regional organization has continued
to survive and the confidence in it has gradually increased.
The organization has evolved continually in the decades since its formation. Its
history can be divided into four distinct phases, each with diverse goals and obstacles that
the association has had to overcome. The first nine years since its creation, 1967-1976,
make up the first phase in which the organization sought to assess its goals. The second
5
phase lasted from 1976 through 1991, characterized by the American exodus from Viet
Nam, followed by Viet Nam’s occupation of Cambodia. The end of the Cold War
triggered the third phase. Lasting from 1992 to 2002, this was a period of rapid expansion
for the organization, seeing it double in size and the rapid economic bubble bursting.
2003 was the start of the fourth, and current, phase with the Declaration of ASEAN
Concord II (Bali Concord II) that codified the formation of the three pillars of the modern
institution: the ASEAN Political and Security Community (APSC), the ASEAN
Economic Community (AEC), and the ASEAN Social and Cultural Community (ASCC).
These communities are still in development and will play a significant role in the
direction of the region going forward. The shifts between the separate phases of ASEAN
were due to strong geo-political changes at the regional and international levels.
First Phase – 1967-1976
The initial formation of ASEAN consisted of five members: Indonesia, Malaysia,
the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand. There was little commonality between these
states, with stronger levels of animosity than trust between its members. This period saw
no meaningful actions taken by the fledgling organization. Instead, it served to maintain
peace which allowed the states to dedicate their limited resources towards internal
stability and development. Dewi Fortuna Anwar describes ASEAN at this time as being
little more than a club for Foreign Ministers as there were no other levels of government,
there were no regional cooperation mechanisms were established and no ASEAN
Summits held. The most noteworthy result of this phase was the values that were taken
6
that would become defining characteristics of ASEAN. Members were to respect
sovereignty and boundaries, vowing to not intervene in another’s domestic issues, and
decision-making in ASEAN was to be done via consensus.
After the United States changed its position and normalized relations with the
People’s Republic of China, ASEAN released their first joint political statement in 1971.
They declared that the Southeast Asian region was a Zone of Peace, Freedom, and
Neutrality (ZOPFAN). Though the founding members all had anti-communist policies,
they sought to maintain a neutral balance between the two large powers.
Second Phase – 1976-1991
The victory of the communist forces in Viet Nam over the American military
super power stunned the members of ASEAN, which played a critical part in the
dissolution of SEATO in 1977, as members lost confidence and interest. Fear built that
the region would eventually fall to communism as Laos and Cambodia transformed.
America was concerned that Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore would eventually fall too,
like dominoes, it did not expect the ASEAN states to remain as resilient as they did. In
February 1976 the first ASEAN summit was held in Bali. There, efforts towards
increasing cooperation in the region were necessary towards resisting the spread of
communism. The Declaration of ASEAN Concord I (Bali Concord I) confirmed the
values that had been established in the preceding decade, the principles of respecting
sovereignty and integrity and to not interfere in one another’s internal matters. This
7
meeting also led to the formation of an ASEAN Secretariat and efforts to increase
economic cooperation in the region.
Another significant milestone of this period was the Treaty of Amity and
Cooperation (TAC), in which the signees agree to ban the use or threat of force and that
all conflicts must be resolved peacefully. This was put to the test immediately in
December 1978 when Viet Nam went on the offensive after provocations by the Khmer
Rouge regime, invading and occupying Cambodia. In its first major diplomatic challenge
in determining how to respond, whether to accept the occupation or to diplomatically
oppose it. While the Cambodian government was looked down upon by the ASEAN
states, they viewed the invasion by Vet Nam as unacceptable and pushed for peace
negotiations. After years of talks, ASEAN was eventually able to bring about an end to
the conflict. This was a monumental diplomatic success for ASEAN, gaining it
significant amounts of credibility in the international community. This phase also saw the
first introduction of a new member to ASEAN with the acceptance of Brunei in 1984.
Third Phase – 1992-2002
The third phase of ASEAN was of expansion. With the admission of Viet Nam
(1995), Laos (1997), Myanmar (1997), and lastly Cambodia (1999), ASEAN had doubled
in size from its original roster. The integration of the new members allowed for greater
economic trade and dismantling of barriers, but its policy for consensus in decision-
making became increasingly difficult. The end of the Cold War was a turning point in
8
international relations around the world, including Asia. It allowed an opening for
ASEAN to shift from its anti-communist policies towards promoting its values of peace,
non-interference, and integration of the region. While reluctant at first, it decided to
support Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC). It also pushed for a forum to
promote diplomacy in the region, establishing the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF). The
organization also expanded its engagement in the region with membership in a series of
intergovernmental organizations and forums. It also signed several bi/multi-lateral free
trade agreements. Economically, this decade saw a massive flux as economies throughout
ASEAN and the region’s markets expanded rapidly. This growth was cut short as
ASEAN faced another major challenge when the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis began in
Thailand and decimated economies throughout Asia. The economic and political fallout
from the credit bubble bursting still can be seen.
Fourth Phase – 2003-Present
While the third phase was a period of massive expansion for ASEAN, the fourth
phase has been one of solidifying the regional organizations. In 2003 the ASEAN summit
was held in Bali for the Declaration of the ASEAN Concord II (Bali Concord II), which
established times for the three pillars of the ASEAN Community, the ASEAN Security
Community, ASEAN Economic Community, and ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community.
These are to be the foundations for more concerted development towards further
integration and expand the scope for their role in the region.
9
On the fortieth anniversary of the formation of ASEAN, at the 13th ASEAN
Summit at Singapore in 2007, the ASEAN Charter was signed, ratified in 2008. This
Charter serves as a constitution for the association, establishing the principles of
centralizing regional cooperation as well as international relations through ASEAN,
promoting a regional identity, and continuing the values of sovereignty and non-
interference. It also increased the number of summits to twice a year. Though it does not
have any direct means of enforcement, even from the Secretariat, it has gained enough
weight that the members no longer act entirely independent from it.
Though there is no titled leader in ASEAN, Indonesia has viewed itself as de
facto filling that role, given its large geography and population. This has generally been
informally accepted by the other members. Ralf Emmers examines how successful
Jakarta has been in exercising leadership within ASEAN in Indonesia’s role in ASEAN: A
case of incomplete and sectorial leadership and how it has been viewed by other Asian
states, in such issues as mediating the conflict in Cambodia and the South China Sea. The
organization struggles trying to maintain neutrality amidst the growing tensions between
the United States and China in order to keep good relations with both, even as it increases
its defense ties with the United States’ military. A significant embarrassment for
Indonesia was when it had to renounce its claim over East Timor in 1999, the loss of
territory was a deep humiliation for Jakarta. Separatist movements and sectarian violence
also brought further instability to domestic politics. These were severe blows to what had
traditionally represented the political center of the Association. During the Asian
financial crises and burgeoning threat of international terrorism, Indonesia was very slow
to respond. Its president being viewed as ambivalent and lacking the will to act decisively
10
caused frustration amongst the other ASEAN members as well as friction with the United
States. While previously viewed as a strong contributor to regional security, its inability
to deal with domestic terrorism became a source of international concern. Indonesia had
aspired for an autonomous security environment that would be unaffected by external
intervention, though this is not agreed upon by other ASEAN members that have
historically rejected this conception of the regional order and instead often relied upon
ties with external actors to ensure security. “Most member states have not perceived the
Association as a security arrangement that can replace existing bilateral links with
external players, especially with the United States” (Emmers 2014, 549-550). With the
role of the Secretary General being to observe discussions more so than guide them, and
having no true powers of enforcement, the larger states within ASEAN will continue to
act with more power. Though they remain constrained by the requirement of consensus
with their fellow members.
11
Chapter III: Regional Organizations and International Relations Theory
General theory and practice of regional organizations in international relations
There have been many attempts to apply theories to the mechanics of international
relations. Both realism and liberalism have remained the dominant approaches, though
they have gone through several fragmentations, classical, and ‘neo’ iterations. Alternative
approaches, such as constructivism and functionalism, have emerged but have not yet
reached as high of a rate of acceptance by practitioners. Intergovernmental organizations
(IGOs) are predominantly classified by the organization’s purpose and the size of its
membership. At the highest level, there are organizations such as the United Nations and
its precursor the League of Nations, seeking as inclusive of a membership as possible.
Institutions this immense are multipurpose, with diplomatic efforts spanning across
political, economic, military, and humanitarian needs. While the breadth and
effectiveness of these efforts is continuously being debated internally and externally, the
scale of these institutions has not always given them an equivalent level of influence, as
the diversity of their membership leads to many divisions across political boundaries.
Regional based organizations have many of the same weaknesses, but they bring with
them many additional strengths.
While the proximity of the states within a region has given them a shared
geographical identity and common history with which they can relate to each other, this
shared history can also be filled with political or militaristic strife leading to suspicion
throughout the organization. The European Union has overcome many challenges to
obtain its current level of integration, but that has been an established goal; other regional
12
organizations, such as the Organization of the Americas, have sought to resolve political
and economic disputes peacefully, but the historic feud between the United States and
Cuba has always made rifts. The African Union (AU) has had some success in its
attempts to resolve some of the conflicts through multinational operations, but there are
still high levels of distrust of these efforts as being invasions rather than humanitarian
efforts. The degree of influence these institutions have over their members varies greatly.
While some regional organizations such as the Shanghai cooperation only seek to
facilitate trade and security efforts in central Asia, others such as Common Market of the
Southern Cone (MERCOSUR) also seek to expand cultural and legal collaboration.
The size and goals of an IGO are fundamentally linked, but neither is static. As
small multilateral organizations mature, they often develop from strictly economic
initiatives into security or vice versa, which could expand the association into a full
regional organization. The expanding fields of initiatives over time will bring with them
new regional norms, changing the cultural identity of the region. This effect is less seen
in much larger associations. Institutions that cross regions are so broad in nature that
there has been little effect on the identity at the local level. While the European Union
has worked to cultivate an identity of being European, more expansive organizations such
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and Soviet Union each fostered a shared sense of
‘us versus them’ mentality that fostered a communal identity; the globalized United
Nations has not made any inroads to date insofar as a globalized identity. Rather, it has
continued to strive towards the international impacts of events and the need for global
response. That United Nation’s personnel providing humanitarian or peacekeeping
13
interventions serve under the UN’s banner, instead of their homeland, demonstrates a
value in international cooperation over the assertions of a singular power.
What international relations theory says about why regional organizations have
proliferated and gained traction in the post-Cold War period
With the disappearance of bi-polarity, regional intergovernmental organizations
gained a functional usefulness for the first time, no longer constrained by the Cold War.
The end of the Cold War brought about significant changes in governance at the regional
level. Before, the West and East blocs were primarily concerned with the political
alignment of the region and access to its resources, fighting for influence with various
overt and covert means. As the ‘Iron Curtain’ fell in Europe, regions around the globe
gained much more control in their self-governance, the primary draw now being on
opening markets under globalization. Regional shifts have emerged as a significant topic
of research since then fall of the Berlin Wall. “With the end of the Cold War, the proper
understanding of regional conflict and cooperation patterns assumed wider significance”
(Paul 2012, 15). During the Cold War, regional conflicts were viewed by the great
powers as a means to gain or maintain influence, but now states within the region have
become the primary driving force behind conflict resolution, giving much more influence
from regional intergovernmental organizations (RIGO) than before.
This transition has been very difficult. Many developing nations were largely
reliant upon economic and security assistance from the superpowers and now must
change their political and economic institutions to face the new world order. Many
14
regional organizations failed to shift into a post-Cold War world as the early enthusiasm
for the prospects of peaceful cooperation did not lead to tangible improvements in
relations. Interregional strife that had previously been mitigated or suppressed is now
surfacing, sparking an increase in small- and medium-sized conflicts along ethnic and
other cultural lines. While the United Nations or other large international institutions
have intervened in some instances, others have been left only to local actors; these
organizations are unprepared as they lack much of the necessary equipment or training to
respond. A serious concern in times of intervention is the risk that these peacemaking
forces instead are viewed as an invading army, upsetting the population and furthering
the conflict.
While through the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Europe has already had in
place a military cooperation, it has also sought to create a regional force structure within
the European Union. Given the advanced and stable nature of these states and their
already capable military prowess, this would be a formidable force. As the EU has
expanded its membership into Eastern Europe, it is struggling with overcoming decades
of Soviet practices ingrained into the culture. Overcoming these from differing political,
economic, military, and cultural practices will be crucial for integration efforts and long
term regional stability.
One of the more significant examples of the changing role of regional
intergovernmental organizations in the post-Cold War landscape was the approach taken
by the African nations. In 1963, the Organization of African Unity was formed,
promoting the cooperation of member states to remove the last vestiges of colonialism
15
which had shaped the continents history for over a century, and to give a more unified
resistance to pressures from the Western and Eastern blocs of the Cold War. In the 1990s,
African leaders decided that the best approach going forward would be to create a new
organization, an African Union, rather than undertaking the effort to remodel the existing
institutional structures of the OAU. While still incorporating many of the previous
union’s principles of solidarity and sovereignty, the AU also sought to expand
cooperation into promoting the democratic principles of popular participation, good
governance, human rights, and increasing the standard of living. The new institution also
includes efforts towards coordinating reginal economic communities, scientific and
technological efforts, and disease eradication efforts (African Union Sumit 2002). Similar
regionally independent organizations have emerged, such as the MERCOSUR, a trade
bloc founded in 1991 between Argentina; Brazil; Paraguay; Uruguay and Venezuela,
though Venezuela has been suspended since December 2016. A more recent effort with a
larger membership is the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, founded
in 2011, which includes every country in the Western Hemisphere except the United
States and Canada. This only the latest in a series of organizations that have attempted to
foster a more cohesive regional institution that would not be reliant upon, or controlled
by, larger powers.
The approach in Asia was instead to reform its already existing Association of
Southeast Asian Nations, which had institutionalized a policy of non-interference in
internal conflicts among the member states as a core principle. European colonial efforts
had less of an impact in Asia as, unlike in Africa, it already had strong sovereign states.
While there were strong colonial efforts, they were more focused on forced trade rather
16
than exploitation and repressing efforts of resistance such as the Boxer Rebellion or the
prolonged Vietnamese guerilla efforts. The long history of these states and foreign
interference has led to a strong sense of state sovereignty, which has shaped ASEAN’s
trajectory. While it has fostered a mutual respect for self-determination, it has also left the
organization incapable of effectively responding in cases of international terrorism or
humanitarian crises. Its focus has remained on common security, rather than a
cooperative security intuition. It’s non-militaristic ethos has pushed it to rely upon
diplomatic efforts to stabilize the region through inclusiveness with initiatives such as the
ASEAN Regional Forum, which was established in 1994, has sought inclusiveness in its
membership. This even extends to embracing strategic rivals such as China and the
United States, North and South Korea, and India and Pakistan. The organization has
made inroads into improving relations, even cooperation, between its members.
United Nation’s affirmation of the role of regional organizations and local governments
The Cold War divisions left the United Nations incapable of responding to most
regional crises, due in large part to the veto power of the rivaling Security Council
members who had political or economic stakes in the region. During the prolonged
conflict, the Secretaries General had to increasingly turn to regional organizations not
only for their local expertise, but because their proximity to the burgeoning conflicts led
to a greater willingness to prevent its spread. This method of response has continued after
the collapse of the Soviet Union. In 1997 UN Secretary General Kofi Annan released a
report, Renewing the United Nations: A Programme for Reform, to the General Assembly
17
in which he expressed the reliance upon regional organizations due to the United
Nation’s inability of to respond effectively. “Under present conditions, ad hoc Member
States coalitions of the willing offer the most effective deterrent to aggression or to the
escalation or spread of an ongoing conflict” (United Nations 1997).
Having remained the same for the length of the institution’s existence and
seeming unlikely to change, there are two significant reasons for this: divisions on the
security council among vetoing members and lack of resources and personnel for
peacemaking and peacekeeping operations. The current conflicts in the Middle East
underscore the Security Council’s ability, and willingness, to respond cooperatively. This
comes in part as a consequence of initial agreements being made to end growing civil
strife in Libya, which had been agreed upon by the council for a limited response, but left
China and Russia viewing the actions taken by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) forces as greatly exceeding what they had agreed to in the resolution. While
Russian forces have come to be directly engaged in the Syrian conflict, the Russian and
Chinese governments have repeatedly blocked attempts for resolutions against the Syrian
government. These divisions on the Security Council mire any potential actions in
debates of rhetoric rather than logistics, negatively skewing the intuition as a whole in the
public’s mind.
The UN has continued to encourage greater connections with regional
organizations, recently adopting ten resolutions to address global challenges,
acknowledging efforts from various regional institutions as the African Union and the
Shanghai Cooperation. The resolutions push for more direct interactions between the UN
18
and the other organizations, “encouraging deeper cooperation between the United
Nations and various regional organizations to address emerging challenges in sustainable
development, fighting terrorism and economic integration” (United Nations 2016). This
would include more direct consultations with the various organizations as well as
establishing ties between the UN’s specialized agencies and their regional counterparts to
expedite logistical and financial support. As regional strife continues to spread and
historical rivalries gridlock the UN Security Council, regional organizations will likely
grow as the preferential instrument of the Secretary General and the General Assembly.
How regional intergovernmental organizations make states attractive vehicles for foreign
policy
The practice of foreign relations becomes inherently more complicated when
applied through a regional organization, following the delicate nature of discourse
between member states as well as formulating external policies that can be agreed upon.
“IGOs are important actors because state leaders believe they are. When state leaders
deliberate over major foreign policy actions, they almost always find themselves
considering repercussions that may involve one or more IGOs” (Kinsella, Russet and
Starr 2013, 82). The nature of these regional intergovernmental organizations can vary
dramatically depending on the political and cultural identity of its members, and thus
attempting to extend that into a shared regional identity is difficult. It is upon this shared
regional history that a new more expansive identity can manifest; additionally, with local
and state institutions, expectations will form around the organization’s responsibilities as
19
it finds its role in society. The role of an IGO becomes institutionalized as the citizens
within them come to rely upon, and even expect, them to act in certain ways. “They
expect the United Nations to help calm areas of conflict, as it did in East Timor to keep
the peace and prepare for the transition toward independence beginning in 1999”
(Kinsella, Russet and Starr 2013, 81). As the continued practice of these institutions goes
on, they become socio-political norms, over time serving to greatly enhance the building
of a larger cultural identity.
The effectiveness of these organizations is analyzed through differing views in
international relations theory. The various theories differ in their views of the inherent
purpose and value of states allying together. Whereas realism takes the stance that states,
like individuals, are inherently homogenous self-serving and thus should only seek paths
that will benefit them directly, there is no authority over the state. Liberalism asserts the
centrality of domestic preferences, that the benefits of enhancing the group as a whole
will create greater stability and that the larger institutions should govern over the states.
Constructivism shifts the focus away from the policies of the state but rather onto the
effects of historical interactions at the societal level and how those bonds of shared
culture are as important in creating regional identities as the actions made at the state
government level.
The major paradigms may be used causally (to explain what causes institutions or
behavior) or descriptively (to describe the fundamental orientation or values of an
institution or behavior) and may be applied to a variety of actors, including states and
20
regional organizations. This thesis will use the paradigms descriptively and apply them to
a regional organization, namely ASEAN.
Realism
A central principle in the various iterations of realism would be that a regional
organization exists in an anarchic global system where other states cannot be depended
upon to cooperate, and any cooperation should be ended when it is no longer
advantageous. The nation-state is the fundamental actor and thus, as a rational actor,
seeks to ensure its own security and prosperity over the needs of others, including
through the formation of regional organizations to advance its security and power. This
can result in attempts to form a hierarchical order of military and economic powers and a
balance within that order. Larger states will be much more inclined to aggressively assert
their influence in the region as hegemonic powers if there is no counter-balancing force,
be it another large state power or by a coalition of states. It behooves smaller states to ally
with larger ones of similar ideology and culture for their security or to join a strong
enough collection that would dissuade potential threats. Regional organizations may thus
play a role as vehicles for state ambitions. A central difference between classical realism
and neorealism is that, while they both view that state as the primary actor, the classical
realists view conflict as an inevitable failing due to human nature. Whereas the
Neorealism views conflict as the outcome of a void in the international order, and that
states will seek to assert their dominance when possible.
21
The balance of hegemonic powers is critical in order to maintain peace under
most forms of realism, as no state would be likely to attempt aggression without a clear
advantage. Neorealism theorizes that regional order very much plays a role of the larger
international system, as well as of the balance of power among the larger powers.
Bipolarity at the international level maintains regional peace while multipolarity
destabilizes. Neorealism views the great powers as the main caretakers of regional order.
The balance between these powers serves to create stability in the region, and the security
organizations that they foster can expand into other socio-economic forms. It was the
Cold War competition, and within it the presence of the United States and its sphere of
protection, that served to create the European Union, this security institution created the
conditions without which the Union would not have been possible.
Liberalism
The primary emphasis of liberalism is on the potential capability for nations and
regional organizations to institute an agency through which they can collectively prosper
and externally influence to a greater degree than they would be capable on their own, due
to their varied domestic preferences. This theory is such a strong counter to realism
because its focus goes far beyond that of solely security, instead concentrating on the sets
of domestic actors that cross borders and their interests. Under this theory, the emphasis
for change is with the ability of nations and leaders to resolve their disputes through clear
policies built around liberal values. Internal actors, social groups, and organizational
lobbies all vie to influence the state’s institutions, affecting the state’s external policies.
22
States with heterogenous preferences would become integrated so they would seek to
create IGOs that manage this integration for their own constituency. If developed, these
three actors allow for the emergences of a security community. Economic
interdependence generates strong incentives towards cooperative efforts, and significant
vulnerabilities that would deter in regional conflict with one another. Strong regional
institutions have instilled this process by offering a means for engagement, and a venue
for dispute settlement.
The notion of economic integration leading to enduring peace is a central value
driving the efforts behind globalization; as state economies become more intertwined, it
would be too costly to create conflict. The removal of barriers between markets will not
only expand the potential for material trade but will also allow for greater cultural trade
as well. The driving ideology behind globalization has been neoliberalism, which focuses
on economic liberties in addition to the political liberties rooted in classic liberalism.
States will seek to minimize risk in uncertain conditions of interdependence by promoting
the creation of formalized rules and norms. The potential gain from this integration has
been a strong force in aligning states that previously had been rivals, such as was the case
with the European Union, whose economic integration after long histories of conflict has
led to further political collaboration.
Constructivism
23
Though newer than the other two approaches to international relations,
constructivism takes a more normative, ideational, and cultural-focused approach. Rather
than focusing solely on the state elite to determine if a state or regional organization is
perusing militaristic expansionism or economic alliances, this method factors in the
cultural and normative interactions within the global sphere. Whereas realism focuses on
states, and regional organizations, behaving as rational actors, this approach views states
as actors with more normative behavior that reflects their distinct cultures. States interact
in a social environment much in the same way individuals would. They seek friendly
relations with those who share likeminded goals. The perception of goals and obstacles
are developed through the history of idea entrepreneurs. Under this theory, norms and
practices are considered significant towards the formation and perseverance of regional
order. Norm entrepreneurs serve to create and diffuse these ideas internationally. Cultural
and economic exchanges done at the local level between separate nations can influence a
greater relationship.
This focus on the cultural practices gives way to much greater understanding of
the how and why a state or regional organization would act counter to one from another
region in a similar situation. Europe, divided for centuries of conflict, has been able to
build upon the cooperation of economic and security integrations to make great strides
towards a unified European identity; yet a generation after the end of the Cold War, that
only scarce few interactions have taken place at the cultural level has given way to
resuming tensions as both sides have not found a shared approach to engagement with
each other. The establishments of new, shared norms and practices serve to create a
greater cultural bond within a region. The more holistic approach of constructivism in
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international relations theory seeks to include the importance of state security, the
material needs of the economy, and the social norms more deeply than the other two
approaches.
The historical interactions between cultures, the ‘cognitive priors,’ persist as the
foundation of contemporary views. These legacies passed down, such as feuds from wars
fought by prior generations, can serve to prevent any social bonds from forming, even
when the states wish to pursue strategic alliances. In East Asia, as Japan and the Republic
of Korea governments acknowledge the need for greater cooperation for regional
security, the cultural legacy from the last century makes combined efforts extremely
difficult, as the citizens have held on to their grievances. In other cultures that more
readily allow for change, the necessity of security alliances can lead to greater
cooperative interactions and build new relationships at the local level, this serves to ward
off regional conflict but can also lead towards the development of a communal identity.
The design of an institution embodies the norms that caused them, as shared experiences
makes the development of collective identity more viable. “In a constructivist framework
the effects of institutions can be far reaching, changing actors’ beliefs and identities, and
hence, their definition of interests. As handmaidens of new actors, tasks, and objectives,
institutions are purposive agents specifying authority patterns and allocating
responsibilities” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 6). Where realists view the weak decision-
making process institutionalized within ASEAN, and a liberalist would focus on the
failings of the economic collaboration to expand into further socio-political programs, a
constructivist would view the historical and cultural developments among the diverse
states in the region as a logical path to the established norms.
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Chapter IV: Questions and Research Design
Theoretical debates on "What is ASEAN"
Each paradigm of world affairs seeks to explain how the ASEAN can, or should,
operate in state-to-state and regional affairs. Realism focuses on a ‘security and power
first’ agenda driving all interaction, seeking power to control and manipulate
relationships, the goal being security over all other needs. Liberalism shifts the focus to
the role of diverse actor preferences, including the heterogenous preferences of domestic
societies and the possibility of different cooperative or conflictual solutions (institutions
and behavior) emerging depending on the shape of those preferences. Constructivism
focuses more on discursive emergence of the assumptions and goals of state and non-
state actors, not the inevitable outcome of the prior theories, looking at how the social
norms develop and shape institutions. The question I address here is whether ASEAN is a
regional organization whose institutions and behavior conforms most closely to one of
these three. While this is closely related to the behavior and policies of its member states,
the two remain separate because ASEAN is a structure that supervenes upon these states
but is not reducible to them. In this chapter, I will examine how various experts have
examined ASEAN through the lenses of these theories and illuminate gaps in the applied
logic, and lastly, propose a research design towards determining a more accurate
understanding of the Asian association.
Realism
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From a neorealist perspective, the association’s time of greatest power is when
there is a period of equality among the large actors in the region, forcing them to seek to
court influence with ASEAN to gain an advantage. During periods of regional instability,
the group of smaller states would be unable to coordinate, generating negligible effect
and likely being pushed aside in a larger crisis. In International Relations in Southeast
Asia – Between Bilateralism and Multilateralism, Professors N. Ganesan and Ramses
Amer collected contributions from several scholars to examine the interactions between
states in the region since the 1970s. They view that for neorealism, institutions are linked
to powerful states that can find them useful tools of statecraft, a means for exercising
power. The designs of institutions are pliable to their needs and subject to change. While
regional organizations can provide greater strength through larger numbers, either
bolstering a hegemonic power or to provide a counter balance against one, neither of
these apply to ASEAN as there is no hegemonic member, nor does it provide for a
defensive security pact among its members, rather than a series of bilateral agreements,
many of which with outside powers, such as the United States. This view has various
critiques though, as hegemons may have incentives to organize regional institutions but
so have others seeking to balance against them. To this effect, ASEAN serves as a
relevant example, as weaker states may themselves seek to institutionalize in order to
enhance their power within them or out of fear of being left behind. “Williams finds
multilateralism to be advantageous to weaker players because it provides non-
discrimination, reciprocity, and self-restraint, which bilateral agreements generally do
not” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 5).
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Within ASEAN though the complex differences between nationalities and
cultures serve to create difficulties in establishing the trust necessary for cohesive
institutions that could bring security or balance power. In Why is there no APTO? Why is
there no OSCAP?: Asia-Pacific security institutions in comparative perspective, John
Duffield explores the characteristics missing in the Asia-Pacific community that are
necessary to establish a security community that one would expect out of a regional
organization under a realist perspective. A neorealist explanation would view the
structure of the international system as being defined primarily by the number and
relative capabilities of major powers. This view does well to explain the rapid
development of security institutions in both the Euro-Atlantic and the Asia-Pacific
following the Second World War. “It is much less able, however, to account for the
important differences across the two regions” (Duffield 2010, 75). These include such
differences as the nature of security treaties between the two regions; where the Euro-
Atlantic adopted multinational security community culminating in the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, the Asia-Pacific region was intertwined with a multitude of bilateral
agreements. Though both efforts were fostered by the United States, another difference
Duffield noted that is not explained under realism is that the Asian community lacked the
degree of formalization, elaborateness, and multilateralism that was seen in Europe in the
first years after the end of the Second World War, and renewal in the post-Cold War era.
Acharya refers to the works of Karl Deutsch, whose work in the 1950s explored
the development of security communities. Acharya focused on the low priority placed on
regional integration by ASEAN in the traditional sense by suggesting an approach to
community building that is quite different from that defined by Deutsch. Deutsch viewed
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the security community as the end product of an integration process which is driven by a
need to cope with the conflict-causing effects of increased transactions. These
transaction, political, cultural or economic, serve to increase the opportunities for
potential conflict between actors, thus forcing them to develop institutions and practices
that can promote a peaceful transition. In the case of ASEAN though, regional
cooperation was instead undertaken with the absence of high levels of interdependence or
interaction. “ASEAN evolved as a sort of an ‘imagined community’, despite low initial
levels of interdependence and transactions, and the existence of substantial political and
situational differences among its members. In this sense, the vision of community
preceded rather than resulted from political, strategic and functional interactions and
interdependence” (Acharya 2001, 195).
In the absence of a strong state power to rally around, traditional theories would
assert that the small ASEAN forces would seek to coordinate their defenses to create a
credible deterrence from the larger regional powers. This would be justified by the long
history of invasion and colonization in much of their shared history; rather, the regional
norm has swung in the opposite direction in favor of firm independent sovereignty, even
from allies. This avoidance of military pacts, including a multilateral ASEAN military,
was a strong norm for ASEAN regionalism. Instead, a defense community within
ASEAN can only be described as being an overlapping a web of bilateral defense
agreements between most of its members. This approach has several severe
shortcomings. These agreements are at differing stages of development, they operate
under difference doctrines and lack of weapons standardization or joint weapons
procurement. “Differing degrees of defence self-reliance within the region, all reflect, at
29
least partly, lingering military suspicions among the members, and virtually preclude the
emergence of a defence community in Southeast Asia” (Acharya 2001, 200). These
regional norms defy the conventional wisdom of establishing greater levels of security
and economic initiatives.
Liberalism
Classical liberalism praised the potential for intergovernmental organizations, like
the expanding United Nations, to create a more stable and prosperous world, as states
wound find they have more to gain through diplomacy and cooperation. This cooperation
could even extend into conflict as states with likeminded values would ally together
during the turbulent years of the Cold War, which used regional organizations and
political blocs to gain further control and influence than their rival, power in a realist’s
world. Neoliberalism emerged, focusing on economic gains as a leading cause for inter-
governmental cooperation, promoting reduction of trade barriers and tighter economic
integration. The objective being globalization, with liberal values being a benefit rather
than a goal.
This view demonstrates much of the actions taken by ASEAN, in which the
majority of steps towards integration have been taken with a focus on economic
cooperation at the forefront. The five founding members worked with a domestic model
of economic growth through engagement in the global economy. Their uniting interest in
collaborating regionally through ASEAN was to protect their model from domestic
30
insurgencies and regional threats to their model’s domestic dominance. Under this system
there was increased per capita, high employment, and increased investments in health and
education, and returns to small businesses and farmers. While the focus remained on
gradual and selective internationalization, while intra-regional efforts of trade and
integration were not a priority.
The strength of the ASEAN Economic Community was that it would remain
separate from the political and social spheres; this would allow for a more inclusive range
of members that would otherwise not come together over competing political models.
The focus on economic development goals over challenging the regional powers in an
economic or militaristic power struggle does follow in line with the liberalist model, but
many of its actions defy the theory. Instead of seeking to fuse its governance into an
overarching organizational level, many of the state governments have resisted ceding any
level of sovereignty. It has not worked towards consolidating its economic programs or
currencies, as has been a long-established goal of the European Union. The variations
between the cultures and governing methodologies places limits on the collaborative
efforts. It also shares many similarities and differences with constructivism.
“There is also a growing tendency towards analytical eclecticism, which includes
both material and ideational variables of realism, liberalism and constructivism, in order
to explain the dynamics of security in Southeast Asia” (Floristella 2015). When
comparing to constructivism, Angela Pennisi di Floristella notes the shared emphasis of
norms, principles, standards of behavior, and interactions, but the two theories have
distinct divergences. Both theories highlight the importance of institutions in regard to
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regional security, but she believes that they hold differing perspectives on the reason why
institutions matter. Where constructivists associate institutions with the rise of a
community, and the mutual recognition of an identity, neoliberal institutions instead
primarily serve to create a stable and functional environment in which all states pursue
their own interests. As a result of this, the two approaches take different views of the
circumstances under which cooperation among states is likely to occur or what form of
institutions will result from the interstate cooperation. A constructivist focus is on shared
values, which give way to the creation of a communal identity which is not defined by
interests alone. Neoliberals place significant emphasis on the importance of shared
interests as the driving force behind the development of interactions and the formation of
a system of cooperation.
Constructivism
In recent history, constructivist approaches have been heavily utilized to
understand ASEAN as a multilateral institution. One of the more ardent proponents of
applying the constructivist methodology in the analysis of ASEAN has been Amitav
Acharya, a professor at the American University, who over many bodies of work has
championed the advantages of this new approach, such as in Constructing a Security
Community in Southeast Asia: ASEAN and the Problem of Regional Order. A reason that
the creation of ASEAN is significant is from the high level of divergence between its five
founding states in terms of ethnic composition, socio-cultural heritage, colonial and
postcolonial polities. These states also lacked any experience in multilateral cooperation.
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Absent cultural and political homogeneity as a shared norm for the basis for regionalism,
the norms had to be constructed through interaction. “Such interactions could only be
purposeful if they were consistent and rule based, employing those rules which would
ensure peaceful conduct among the member states. To this end, ASEAN’s founders over
a period of a decade from its inception adopted and specified a set of norms for intra-
regional relations” (Acharya 2001, 47). The historical development of these norms is
essential to understanding the foundational pillars of an institution, more so than basing
our understanding of an organization through perceived goals from a foreign background.
Whereas other regional intergovernmental organizations such as the European
Union had from a relatively early date established an ‘end goal’ of political unification
and could work towards that over the following decades, the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations did not establish lofty long-term goals, focusing instead on short-term
programs that could be more viable with contemporary socio-political realities. The
cultural diversity and historical distrust of foreign states prevents greater consolidation
within ASEAN that would be expected to be a desired path under the liberalist theory, as
does the lack of effort towards generating greater levels of strength, economic or military,
in relation to its neighbors, undermine much of the realist model. Where the
constructivist model succeeds in explaining this RIGO is in its embrace of the norms that
have been established historically in the region, rather than seeking to shoehorn ones that
are not present. The unique political culture of the region impacts its direction more than
is embraced by either of the other two theories.
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An issue norm that has become increasingly important in international relations is
that of human rights. As technology and communications become more prevalent,
awareness of human rights on a local level has been brought to greater focus regionally
and globally. Constructivist theory establishes that institutions are reflective of cultural
identity of their citizens, an example being a society that values democracy will form
institutions with transparency and compromise as norms. With ASEAN though, there is a
significant disparity between the values of its citizens and the actions and designs of its
institutions. This action-identity gap is illustrated by its response to human rights. The
adoption of human rights points to those norms being used deliberately for political ends,
particularly the legitimacy of ASEAN to both of its citizens and the international
community. Social changes are continuously resisted until convenient to maintain
stability or advantageous. The disconnect between state and cultural norms it represents
critically undermines constructivist arguments.
ASEAN as a regional Institution vs. ASEAN as something else
A flaw of the three international relations schools is that each places its focus onto
different aspects of the role of regional organizations, neglecting the value of the other
characteristics. Too much research focuses on typecasting ASEAN into the concept of a
traditional regional organization. Realism is primarily focused on security, liberalism
centers on the economy, and constructivism emphasizes on society, culture, and rights.
Each of these areas should be considered vital as a whole in the understanding of a
regional organization, rather than sectioned off from each other. Separate, each of the
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schools only serve to provide a partial explanation of what the role of ASEAN serves for
in the Asia-Pacific community. If ASEAN does not fit within the established paradigms
for international relations, then an innovative approach must be considered. In
International Relations of Asia, Acharya raises awareness of several Western scholars
seeking to create an “Asian IR theory” (Shambaugh and Yahuda 2014, 104). Though,
Acharya notes, there are Chinese scholars who reject the limited theory in search of a
more universal frame, instead they view that attempts to develop a theory should not be
guided by cultural specificity, rather by scientific universalism.
The classical paradigm of an international organization is the focused intent
centered on a security and/or economic nature. The neorealist theory would explain
ASEAN as being weaker states binding themselves to an institution to enhance their
power within or for fear of becoming irrelevant. A neoliberal approach to RIGOs would
be to assert that the goal for states would be to advance their interests by establishing
institutions to promote interdependence and resolve collective action problems.
“Institutions reduce uncertainty, enhance information about preferences and behaviour,
lower transaction costs responsible for market failure, monitor compliance, detect
defections, increase opportunities for cooperation, reduce the costs of retaliation,
facilitate issue-linkages, and offer focal points or salient solutions” (Ganesan and Amer
2010, 6). While ASEAN has created several institutions, they are inherently weak
collaborative efforts with no authority over the organization, or they are spun off into
separate agencies such as the ARF and AEC. Both of the international relations theories
attempt to explain how a regional organization should function, or even what its goals
35
should be, but do not coincide with the historical efforts made by the Asian governments
or the regional organization as a whole.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations cannot be explicitly described
through current international relations theories. There remains strong political resolve
against efforts that could potentially bolster state and regional security or the lack of
control over institutions created to develop economic markets. The distrust in collective
institutions and unwillingness to grant any agency actual power over participant states
undermines the value of the institutions, and yet the states still seek to maintain their
membership to the organization. In the absence of a prevailing model, a new approach
may be needed in order to explain how this RIGO functions, taking account of the local
history and cultural norms, without imposing the preconceptions of existing IR theories
on intergovernmental organizations.
Research design
To explore the capabilities in each of the three dominant IR theories in explaining
the functions and trajectory of ASEAN, I will compare and contrast their responses in the
three distinct issue areas that they would most likely be applied. Does ASEAN represent
a security organization, seeking to establish a defensive stability in the region? Is it a
social or economic focused institution, promoting economic expansion and increased
interrelations? Or is it establishing a higher emphasis on human rights, making
improvements to the quality of life of its members? Each of these areas have been core
36
principles in the relations of other regional organizations and have been used as measure
of analysis from the varying IR theories. I will be taking a look at how these issues are
viewed across the levels of analysis of the region, the states, and the influential actors
inside and outside the association. While each of the three dominant paradigms can be
applied to each of the three issue areas of security, economics, and human rights, their
logics are generally seen as operating most strongly in the following pairs: realism in
security, liberalism in economics, and constructivism in human rights. Using these
pairings to investigate the three paradigms will help to explain ASEAN as they are the
issue areas most probable to prove those paradigms’ intent. Methods such as analytic
eclecticism, promoted by Rudra Sil and Peter J. Katzenstein in their work Beyond
Paradigms: Analytic Eclecticism in the Study of World Politics, work by incorporating
the strengths of focus from the various theoretical schools towards finding a meshed
approach going forward. Utilizing this comprehensive approach will lead to a more
transparent interpretation of what the Association of Southeast Asian Nations is and what
it is not as compared to existing paradigms of international relations.
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Chapter V: Is ASEAN a Realist Security Community
What would a realist security community entail
A traditional hard security organization is institutionalized around formal political
and military alliances promoting mutual defense and strategic coordination in policies.
Classic examples for this form of arrangement are the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
and the defunct Warsaw Pact, both displaying formidable militaristic strength and policy
unity in regard to defense. Examples of strong bilateral security ties come from many of
the United States’ mutual defense ties with states like Canada, as the North American
Aerospace Defense (NORAD), or regional bilateral ties with Asian states, such as Japan
and the Republic of Korea. ASEAN is comprised of small to medium power states,
militarily, and with the exception of Thailand, all have spent a period of their history
under colonial rule. In a region including several medium power states, as well as the
rising large power China, it would seem logical under the neorealist theory of
international relations for the smaller states to either ally with a stronger state or attempt
to create a collective in order to rival any hegemonic powers.
The formation of ASEAN could at a glance be seen as a step towards the latter,
but the organization to date has made no significant efforts towards a true defensive
alliance, instead focusing on diplomatic neutrality with foreign powers and preferring
active economic engagement throughout the region. Realism is focused on the survival
and security of the state and its interests, so it would follow that if ASEAN is a security
organization, it would be operating in a way so as to maximize member security against
large powers or external threats. This chapter will explore whether ASEAN has the
38
capability and the political will to establish itself as a security community in the realist
sense, seeking stability in the region or as a defensive alliance from outside aggressors.
How has it responded to internal and external threats? Is there evidence that ASEAN
behaves like a security community?
Evidence of realist based security community
Does ASEAN reflect a realist security community
In Southeast Asia, ASEAN was established in the background of Cold War
rivalry with the Bangkok Declaration in 1967 under the promise of stability offered by
the American naval presence in Asian waters. Even within regional organizations, such as
ASEAN, there are often efforts to maintain a degree of military parity between member
states. Though there are large and medium powers in the greater Asian region, the
association is comprised of small state powers that seek to avoid any potential of being
dominated within the institution. ASEAN provides an example of states forming without
the need of a large power to facilitate its organization. While the large American presence
in the region maintained a relative peace, it was not part of the process in forming the
association after the failed attempt to copy NATO in 1954 with the Southeast Asia Treaty
Organization. Lack of political cooperation and little in the way of military resources or
joint command structure meant the organization was handicapped from its inception,
slowly being phased out by 1977. The American forces did not have a threatening power
to counterbalance as they did in Europe. It was the states within the region that took the
initiative to establish ASEAN as the central regional institution for cooperation. At least
39
initially, then, ASEAN did not operate to provide some form of military balance or
bandwagoning with existing or rising great powers. From a bandwagon perspective,
ASEAN is intrinsically flawed, as it lacks a dominant power that can effectively guide
the group as a whole. The balance between the Asian states mandates an agreed upon
approach to policies. This results in slow and limited responses as the regional
organizations seek to find a consensus, which remains difficult given the significant
political and cultural diversity between its members. The requirement of consensus
remains a foundational principle within ASEAN and many of its regional associations,
serving to build trust through cooperation rather than imposition, but has prevented
significant resolutions to many of the regional issues such as fishing rights in contested
waters. ASEAN does not serve to create a balance of power against other strong actors
within the region.
From its inception, many of the foundational principles of ASEAN follow the
tenants of realism.
1. Mutual respect for the independence, sovereignty, equality, territorial
integrity, and national identity of all nations
2. The right of every state to lead its national existence free from external
interference, subversion or coercion
3. Non-interference in the internal affairs of one another
While these principles follow many of the central designs of classical realism and its
various iterations, such as sovereignty and the importance of independence from external
influence, and non-interference on other states, the next two are more restricting.
40
4. Settlement of differences or disputes by a peaceful manner
5. Renunciation of the threat or use of force
These principles place restrictions that violate a state’s sovereign path, placing artificial
limitations on its actions, especially in regard to potential threats.
6. Effective cooperation among themselves
While this final principle is not necessarily non-realist, the lack of having any political or
power-based hierarchy leads the organization to be viewed as an immobilized
community.
While it may not have a collective security clause, ASEAN might still be
considered a security community if its secretariat had the authority to mobilize members
in the face of threats. The Secretary General of ASEAN does not have the capacity to
establish agendas; rather, it is an administrative role, serving to facilitate agreements
made by the council. The flat hierarchical power between states necessitates a consensus
in its policy decisions to move forward. In the past larger members have reversed their
state policies in order to coincide with the organization’s will in maintaining consensus.
In comparison, the Secretary General of NATO chairs vital decision making military
bodies, the Defense Planning Committee and the Nuclear Planning Group, guiding
policy, as well as leading diplomatic discussions in the Euro-Atlantic Partnership and the
Mediterranean Cooperation Group. Neither Secretaries General are in the military
command structure. That power remains with the member states. Given the weak
institutional structure, is ASEAN capable of effective governance or response in times of
crisis as NATO? Can the organization serve to provide stability in the region?
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Indications of a hard security community
The ASEAN Regional Forum has served to raise discussion of nonmilitary
security matters, such as transnational crime, environmental hazards, and illegal
population movements. First meeting in 1994, the forum has since grown to include
twenty-seven members. Similarly, the ASEAN Plus Three (APT) summit, which includes
China, Japan, and South Korea in addition to the ASEAN states, seeks to promote efforts
towards a Free Trade Agreement. There are also the more focused ASEAN-US, ASEAN-
Russia, and ASEAN-India summits, which serve to promote ASEAN as a central hub for
diplomacy in the region. However, the ASEAN Way has been that of slow
incrementalism, it does serve towards building a stronger notion of an ASEAN identity,
which is key towards the establishment of a strong security community. Though ARF’s
focus on security has skirted from military matters, a more collective ASEAN could see
that hurdle crossed. That the organization seeks to assert itself as the platform for
regional dialogues elevates its position, which bolsters recognition politically. A more
unified ASEAN, with an established cultural identity, would have an amplified voice in
the global community that could garner greater levels of international support.
The gap created from the absence of an inclusive effort has led members to
increase their military spending, and for some to establish their own defensive ties. From
2006 through 2015, Viet Nam has increased its defense budget by 258%, from 1.3 to 4.6
billion (USD) after value adjustment (Abuza and Nhat Anh 2016). Though this is one of
the fastest spending increases in the region, it is still behind Indonesia, Singapore, and
42
Thailand in overall spending amounts. This surge has been in direct response towards the
increasing tensions with China, an issue many members are having to face but have yet
only done so separately, an approach that benefits China. Viet Nam and the Philippines
held their third confidence-building meeting between naval leaders, proposing increasing
the levels of communication and information sharing between their respective coast
guard and navies. These bilateral connections serve to build stronger bonds that serve to
establish greater trust within the community, including the establishment of working
groups towards cooperative policies.
In August 2017, the Philippines and Thailand signed the terms of reference for a
Joint Committee on Military Cooperation. This is a significant step in a long series of
military cooperation efforts dating back to 2012. Both states have been causing distress in
the ASEAN community. Thailand’s military junta came to power through a coup led by
Prayut Chan-o-cha in 2014 and sought to firmly establish its control. While Filipino
president Rodrigo Duterte was democratically elected, he has run a brutal crackdown
against the drug trade within his country, promoting vigilantism and the mass killing of
traffickers and users alike. While the United States and the Philippines have been historic
allies, signing a mutual defense treaty in 1951, including the periodical stationing of
United States military forces on the islands, on 4 October 2016 President Duterte vocally
confronted then-US President Obama after he had expressed concern over the killings
(Durando 2016). In the following months he expressed his intentions to politically shift
away from America and towards its rivals China and to a lesser extent Russia (Blanchard
2016), both states which do not take a stance against strong authoritarianism and would
politically and strategically gain from the slight against the United States.
43
Thailand is not unfamiliar with coup d'états, having gone through twelve since
1932. Growing political unrest over corruption and unpopular reforms escalated into
widespread protests after then-Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra pushed for pardoning
former politicians charged with corruption and an attempt to amend the constitution. Both
efforts were struck down by the Senate and Constitutional Court respectively. Though
both efforts failed, this fueled the anti-government protests, sparking violence that led to
the death of 28 and over 800 injuries (Olarn 2014). On 7 May 2014, the Constitutional
Court removed Yingluck from office. This only exacerbated the violence and on the 20th
the Royal Thai Army declared martial law. Two days later a coup disbanded the
government and established a junta system titled the National Council for Peace and
Order (NCPO) under the leadership of General Prayut Chan-o-cha. ASEAN states, in
keeping with their tradition of self-determination, responded positively for the most part,
promoting a peaceful transition. Viet Nam’s ambassador showed support for the new
regime while Singapore issued a statement of concern over the coup.
The public claim by Filipino President Duterte to shift alliance towards China has
upset fellow members of ASEAN and shaken the organization’s claim of neutrality.
Though this seems hypocritical given the Philippines existing pact with the United States,
political partnerships such as this have been ‘grandfathered’ after the creation of ASEAN.
If the Philippines were to end its alliance with the United States, it could lead to a
massive shift as other ASEAN states seek to realign themselves for greater stability. Seng
Tan, a Professor of International Relations and the Deputy Director of the Institute of
Defence and Strategic Studies at the Sinnathamby Rajaratnam School of International
Studies expressed concern over the ramifications. Singapore had increased its allowance
44
of American forces after base closures in the Philippines during the early 1990s as the
United States shifted its Cold War positioning. “It could also compel countries like
Vietnam to deepen their security ties with the U.S.” (Kuo 2016).
Despite President Duterte’s call for separation from the United States, he has not
formally altered the alliance. Joint efforts between the militaries continue, including
quarterly discussions between their respective air forces, including one held on the 16th
through the 25th of August 2017 (Parameswaran 2017). These meetings discuss tactical
cooperation and joint exercise drills. Duterte has also sought military aid from Japan and
South Korea, seeking training and equipment. The Philippines has also pursued the
purchase of two frigate class ships to be made in South Korea; this is the first time the
country has acquired new naval vessels. It has traditionally stocked its fleet with ships
decommissioned from the United States Navy and Coast Guard (Cruz de Castro 2016).
There has been a diplomatic whiplash as the Philippines has attempted to garner
concessions from the Chinese regarding fishing rights, at the same time making
statements with Japan agreeing to the continuation of freedom of navigation in the South
China Sea, something that China has been aggressively thwarting. Still, the Filipino
leader states that the Philippine and Chinese friendship is unbreakable.
The actions made by Myanmar, Thailand, and the Philippines to maintain their
identity and independence are rational actions by a state from a realist perspective. The
focus on power, in various forms, and its effective use by neorealist views posits a poor
view on the regional organization. The lack of strength of individual member states and
the unwillingness to pool defensive resource efforts hamper their impact on regional
45
actors. Instead, it is influenced by the larger powers such as China, India, Japan, and the
United States. Without a stronger, rules-based, infrastructure to implement policy,
ASEAN will remain an ineffectual loose association that does not deliver on the goal of
creating regional balance. It would dedicate the effort or resources if the institution’s
focus was on that of security. Instead, it remains moderately dependent upon external
powers to maintain a balance for stability. Between its members is a stark lack of trust in
each other, too much to allow for an agency to gain authority that would impede on state
sovereignty.
Indications of a soft security community
In the 2017 ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting (ADMM), the minsters agreed
upon the goals of increasing senior levels of dialogue, transparency and openness, as well
as to pursue the establishment of an ASEAN Security Community (ASC), per the Bali
Concord II (ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting 2017). While the main objectives of the
ASC are to promote intra-regional peace, this is in contrast to Indonesia’s policy to sink
foreign fishing vessels in its waters. This continued drive towards a unified effort, though
slow, does advance the efforts of a security community.
While the United States has maintained strong bilateral defense ties with many of
ASEAN’s members for decades, the foreign policy of the American government has
become increasingly more erratic. Many of America’s partners around the globe are
becoming less dependent upon it, and this is true throughout Asia where President
46
Trump’s posturing towards North Korea has been viewed as a dangerous escalation,
made without notice to or support from regional allies (Rapp-Hooper 2017). In contrast,
in the 2016 ASEAN-US summit, the second ever held and the first taking place within
the United States, then-United States Secretary of Defense Carter proposed expanding on
the existing bilateral security exercises into more multilateral maritime domain awareness
efforts (Parameswaran 2016). The shift to region-wide efforts is significant towards
building cohesive training and cooperation practices, as is the pervasive presence of the
United States in leading these initiatives. The unpredictable nature of this relationship
makes it progressively more unreliable, but in the short-term ASEAN can use these naval
exercises to establish stronger norms and practices internally as it builds its own
foundations for greater strategic independence in the region as a security community.
Large regional actors wield considerable influence that can help shape a region
around it or serve as a catalyst for unification to oppose it. “Security concerns link the
states to the extent that national securities cannot realistically be considered apart from
one another. A great power active in a region may be part of the regional security
complex by imposing or receiving negative and positive security externalities” (Paul
2012, 17). The networked influence gives smaller states much greater capability as well,
as with the case in Southeast Asia where ASEAN, comprised of small to medium powers,
has proven capable of entangling great powers and attaining a ‘complex balance of
influence.’ In a region of medium powers, Japan and South Korea, a large power, China,
and the significant presence of the United States, the only remaining super power,
attempts at achieving a peaceful and cooperative balance are critical. ASEAN’s location
in the middle of an area with contested overlapping territorial claims, in addition to its
47
principle of neutrality throughout the Cold War that has continued in its relations
between the United States and China, places the network of smaller states in the vital
position of needing to broker a peaceful collaboration with its larger neighbors.
“ASEAN’s approaches to conflict were not geared to external threats but rather to
helping its members achieve regime security vis-à-vis their neighbours through
confidence-building via consultations” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 37). This approach is in
contrast with U.S. bilateral security arrangements in Asia, which are primarily limited
exclusively to external threats. The diplomatic strength of the organization significantly
strengthens the diplomatic capabilities to levels much greater than would be possible by
any single member. A region with a past of nearly continuous war between comparable
powers, the European continent has become a testament towards the benefits of a security
community. The devastations of the conflicts have been left behind for mutual prosperity
and through the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The
continent has worked hard to shift all disputes to diplomatic negotiations. All threats to
peace are now external; its collective military might would give any would-be aggressor
a moment of pause.
Failure to emerge as an Asia-Pacific Treaty Organization
The historical and structural influences
One of the strongest rationales for adopting a regional organization is to ally with
other states to ensure greater security for oneself; the security from threats within a
community is as critical to stability as external threats. Military alliances have been a
48
perennial staple of international relations, as it is a force multiplier not only in times of
war, but as one of the strongest deterrents against a conflict from starting. Extending this
beyond a bilateral alliance into a regional community extends this deterrent effect greatly,
as few states would be willing or capable of going rogue against their surrounding region,
and serves to shape a greater communal atmosphere of prosperous relations that the
community can build upon to expand economic and cultural relationships as well. In
time, this could potentially foster a more unified identity for the region. That is not to say
that the process would be linear or smooth; finding a stable balance upon which to build a
true peace takes time, as with the case of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
seeking to choose a direction for the organization going forward. While there are periodic
and historical tensions between members, no ASEAN state has actively considered direct
conflict with its neighbors, there are periodic spikes in defense spending as states seek to
maintain moderate degrees of military parity amongst one another. “Even Malaysia’s
suggestion for establishing an ASEAN peacekeeping force based on the experience of
several ASEAN state’s armed forces in Cambodia, East Timor, and the Balkans, were
shelved, partly because it might be seen as an attempt to turn ASEAN into a military
alliance” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 40).
Two approaches are raised towards the lack of a hard security organization. In the
first article, Why is there no APTO? Why is there no OSCAP?: Asia-Pacific security
institutions in comparative perspective, John Duffield contrasts the creation of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization in Europe to the reluctance by ASEAN’s members to
collaborate defense. In ASEAN and its Security Offspring: Facing New Challenges,
Sheldon W. Simon examines the threats and difficulties experienced in the region and the
49
attempts that have been made to overcome significant incapability. Both pieces serve to
illustrate the shortcomings of the association when viewed as an organization for security
purposes.
When compared to the Euro-Atlantic institutional security architecture, Asia-
Pacific is fragmented and sparse. While both regions are covered by large numbers of
security ties, European efforts have been focused more on greater levels of
multilateralism and formalization, whereas Asia is a loose network of less
institutionalized bilateral agreements. “Such differences have been emblematic,
moreover, of both externally-oriented collective defence ties and inclusive collective
security arrangements at the regional level” (Duffield 2010, 70). One view taken is that
due to the rising tensions between the United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics after the Second World War, America’s primary focus remained in Europe
reducing its capacity, and will, to foment obligations in another region. The Truman
administration was apprehensive about establishing further security obligations but
accepted the necessity of multilateral solutions. Initially there was some modest
consideration for a multilateral Pacific Pact that would comprise the United States, Japan,
the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, and possibly Indonesia, though this was never
implemented. The caustic effects of Japan’s actions during the war also persisted longer
than Germany experienced in Europe, erecting high obstacles to post-war cooperation
with potential regional partners, obstacles that in many ways have still not been
overcome. A significant factor in the change of perception of Germany was due to the
multinational authority that governed it in the post-war years. While tensions would rise
between the western powers and the Soviet Union during this arrangement, the
50
perception of German threat was retarded by perception of subjugated rule being split
between its former enemies. In contrast, Japan was unilaterally administered by the
United States, limiting complications of the transitionary period, especially given the
complexities arising in Europe. Middle powers such as Britain and France were able to
guide the region together, while the lack of involvement by other Asian powers in
regional reconstruction served to maintain the political/cultural divide throughout the
Pacific.
A strong characteristic that distinguishes the two regions is the geographic
proximity between the states, Duffield notes that many Euro-Atlantic states share borders
with or lie only a short distance from their former enemies. Thus, the fear that imminent
military threats could materialize quickly after the post-war occupation forces have left
remained high. In contrast, in the Asia-Pacific theater, there was enough distance
between most states and Japan that there was less of a prevalent fear. Japan had lost its
ability to project power across the sea, and any effort to rebuild that capability would take
more than adequate time for the United States Navy to intervene. This resulted in less of
an incentive to establish institutional security structures, outside of bilateral ties with the
United States, to ward off a resurgent Japan. The assessment that the American level of
involvement and geography were central issues continues to be a fundamental
explanation, but the author does expand on other possible reasons, stressing the absence
of potential counterbalances to Japan, and the relative distance between Japan and other
states provided it with higher degree of security in comparison with West Germany
which resulted in fewer incentives for security cooperation during the early post-war
years. These factors serve to reinforce regional characteristics, such as enmity toward
51
Japan, distrust of the former colonial powers, and varying levels of development, led to
additional obstacles to the construction of strong multilateral security institutions in the
region.
Regional engagement
While the neorealist model and its focus on power struggle in a competitive world
fit with many regions, the consolidation of power by joining inter-government
organizations that would fit into this theory does not seem to apply to ASEAN. It has not
sought to deter potential threats by establishing a defensive pact. Instead, many members
have established bilateral treaties with non-member states before and after joining the
regional organization. Though a core goal has been to bolster its economies, it has not
leveraged its initiatives, such as the AEC or the ARF, to bolster its position. Its efforts to
date have focused on remaining economically pertinent in the globalized market.
The notion of economic market integration leading to stability and dialogue was
expanded further throughout the region with the ASEAN Regional Forum, with the
objective to establish relations, explored by Andrew T. H. Tan, of the University of New
South Wales, in East and South-East Asia – International Relations and Security
Perspectives. The ASEAN Regional Forum emerged as a system to engage more
powerful states and other external actors was established in 1994. The role this forum
was to build confidence between states, offering a medium for preventive diplomacy, and
for the resolution of conflict between. In its early years, ARF increased in standing as a
52
pro-engagement forum, but it was also sidestepped when high stakes issues needed to be
addressed due to the ASEAN norm of non-interference. One of the most significant
examples of this was when the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea)
withdrew from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 2003. When the Six-Party Talks
were established, ASEAN was not admitted, even though all parties at the talks were
ARF member states. “While the ARF aims to focus on terrorism, maritime security and
disaster relief, it remains a difficult area for states to navigate and there is little optimism
that it will generate the necessary capacity to provide robust responses to current and
emerging” (A. T. Tan 2013, 308). To coordinate its foreign policy goals, ASEAN works
to keep the forum active as a focal point by focusing on broad discussions of regional
concerns over issues such as maritime exclusive economic zone rules. Although it is an
issue needing to be addressed, ASEAN also desired to create a body that would
acknowledge its institutional status. To achieved this, ASEAN ensured that its states
would be the venue for the ARF’s annual meetings. “ASEAN would dominate the
agenda; that inter-session study groups, each composed of two states, would always
include an ASEAN member; and that the ASEAN consensus principle would prevail in
ARF decisions” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 49).
The continued significance of ASEAN and its many collaborative efforts such as
ARF, are hinged on the value that its governments and society place on their capability to
produce results. While economic prosperity remains a central focus, security from
terrorism and other regional crises are becoming increasingly expected. There has been a
notable shift in Southeast Asians that believe their security is best maintained by not
isolating the region from great power activities, as originally envisioned in the RIGO’s
53
creation, but rather by engaging them in multilateral efforts, such as the ASEAN Post
Ministerial Conference, ASEAN Plus Three, and the ARF. Though these measures were
originally intended toward keeping the United States and China involved in the region’s
security, little progress has been made on multilateral issues outside of economic
discussions, especially in regard to security in the region and sovereignty disputes.
What shape would a theoretical ASEAN security institution take
There are significant similarities between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
and the Warsaw Pact. Both security organizations are comprised of members that share a
separate layer of alliances, often economic or political, within the greater organization as
well a larger state that guides the policy objectives. The majority of NATO’s European
members are also part of the European Union and pursuing greater levels of economic
and political integration. The United States is by a large margin the biggest military
power within NATO. It is not a member of the EU. Instead, it maintains significant trade
relationships throughout the region. Within the Warsaw Pact there was the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics, both of which were governed to varying degrees by Russia.
The common bonds of political and economic ideologies served to unite members of
these organizations and serve as the catalyst of division between NATO and the Warsaw
Pact. The threat of invasion that many Europeans felt by the large presence of Soviet
forces in Eastern Germany was a driving force in the creation of NATO, which in turn
led a threatened Soviet Union to seek to expand its buffer of satellite states from the
western military alliance.
54
In contrast, ASEAN does not contain a military or economic power that is
significantly large enough to assert its policies over the rest, nor does it possess
commonalities that served to unite other regional organizations. One commonality
between the regional organizations that is paramount to a security community is the
elimination of the use of force in disputes between members. Building off this principle,
the region needs to shift socially towards the establishment of a common identity. This is
critical for the successful formation of a community. Though European states have a
history of centuries of conflict between each other, the fact that they share many core
liberal values served extensively towards the establishment of a European identity. There
remain significant degrees of tension between ASEAN states over border security. That
institutions within the organization have successfully maintained peace in attempts to
broker solutions is a great start towards establishing norms. Unlike either of the other two
regional organizations, ASEAN does not face a direct existential military threat. It could
be argued that China is a significant danger to many individual members, that the
association as a whole maintains a principle of neutrality, prevents a coordinated
response. States instead turn to outside actors for bilateral security assurances, most
significantly the United States, which has a defense pact with the Philippines. If the Asian
states were seeking to mimic the other organizations, it should pursue to incorporate a
large regional power like Japan, India, or South Korea. All three of these are strong
militarily and economically, which would bolster the organization. Currently many of the
member states seek to maintain parity between each other out of rivalry but accepting in a
much stronger member would serve to greatly reduce the threat of inner conflict and
instill the capability to coordinate forces to respond to crisis faster than parallel members.
55
While many states already share military and economic ties with the United States,
inviting it to join ASEAN would counter the possibility of establishing a common
identity, unlike the United States’ alliances with European states as they share more
cultural common values.
An alternative to incorporation would be to expand upon the bilateral security ties
many of the ASEAN members have with outside powers, such as India and the United
States, to encompass the organization as a whole. This would allow it to benefit from a
greater range of partner states to work with, while maintaining its internal composition as
is. The challenge of this though is that without a more dominant partner to guide the
institution, the consensus-based planning will impede decisive initiatives. Maintaining its
membership roster to existing states that are in close proximity helps towards the
necessary establishment of the cultural identity; this has only progressed slowly to date.
Not having the United States serving as a key arbiter for the formation of a
multilateral union was certainly a strong possible factor for any association to exist
earlier on in the beginning years after the Second World War. However, the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations did eventually form in the following decade, though with
little arrangements in the way of security, lending weight to the view of the geographical
proximity between states in the region, especially when compared to that of Europe,
creating a lack of need for mutual defense. This has changed significantly with the
advances in military technology and force projection in the region. This could lead to
significant changes in the perception towards security needs, “the regional distribution of
power remains highly skewed in favour of Japan and, increasingly, China. Consequently,
56
the smaller countries may well continue to fear the possible domination of regional
security arrangements by those countries” (Duffield 2010, 87).
Division also holds back policy cohesion, but efforts to maintain peace in the
region have formed much of the core principles for the association. The 1971 declaration
of Southeast Asia to be a Zone of Peace, Freedom, and Neutrality served to constitute the
framework in which Southeast Asia declares itself to be free of nuclear weapons. This
move was made in part to maintain a non-aligned position during the Cold War, as well
as to prevent any member from allying with an outside power to increase their strength in
the organization; though bilateral defensive arrangements with external states predating
the declaration were allowed to continue. From its creation, ZOPFAN was a reaction to
two separate visions for security in the region. Malaysia had proposed that the continued
neutrality between the great powers guaranteed the region security. Indonesia countered
that the Southeast Asian states themselves should provide the region’s security. “Jakarta
was concerned primarily about China, and Kuala Lumpur ultimately acquiesced. The
Indonesian neutrality plan was also acceptable to Thailand, Singapore, and the
Philippines because it was sufficiently vague that a continued American balancing
presence was tacitly accepted” (Simon 2007, 13). This division about the organization’s
own role in its security is a central issue that has led to the existing shortcomings with
domestic terror.
The inability for governments in the region to control groups within their own
borders stands out as one of the largest threats to regional security. While no ASEAN
government supports insurrection against a neighbor, governments have been unwilling,
57
or unable, to suppress groups that take shelter within their borders. Thai separatists have
fled to northern Malaysia; large numbers of Karen are located inside the Thai northern
border; Philippine Moros are found in Malaysian. In the aftermath of the Bali bombings,
police forces representing ASEAN gathered in Jakarta in January 2003, proposing an
antiterrorism task force to be established in order for each state to strengthen regional
antiterrorist collaboration. This joint effort enabled the Indonesian National Police and its
contemporaries in their efforts towards several terrorist networks. This was not a
straightforward process, as the sovereign governments differed on how far they were
willing to open jurisdictions. Indonesia and Malaysia requested that legislation should be
passed by each state to make terrorism an extraditable offense. Singapore refused,
protesting the different legal systems within ASEAN, “though Singapore’s primary
concern is probably the safety of large numbers of wealthy ethnic Chinese who fled from
Indonesia to Singapore in the wake of anti-Chinese riots in 1998” (Simon 2007, 9-10).
Slowly governments are making modest efforts to combat terrorism, but even with the
rise in bombings in previous years, it was not until the 2007 summit that ASEAN agreed
on the ASEAN Convention on Counterterrorism, an ongoing effort that takes years often
for member states to ratify. Despite the existing threats, governments are apprehensive to
take actions that would relinquish any amount of state sovereignty. The issue of
sovereignty and state’s jurisdiction is a handicapping issue for the region to coordinate
efforts on issues such as piracy. Though Japan put forward a call for a regional coast
guard, the ongoing disputes over territorial claims at sea, as well as the historical fears of
Japan, blocked the effort from adoption. Many Southeast Asian states have shown to be
disinclined to prosecute those detained in their waters for crimes committed in other
58
countries, preferring to deport them instead. Individual members are making modest
efforts to upgrade their own capabilities; they are wary to do so though as members
within the association struggle to vie for military parity between each other rather than
seek mutually beneficial efforts.
In 2006, the first ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting was held. The stated intent
was: to promote regional peace and stability through dialogue and cooperation in defence
and security; to give guidance to existing senior defence and military officials dialogue
and cooperation in the field of defence and security within ASEAN and between ASEAN
and dialogue partners; to promote mutual trust and confidence through greater
understanding of defence and security challenges as well as enhancement of transparency
and openness; and to contribute to the establishment of an ASEAN Security Community
(ASC) as stipulated in the Bali Concord II and to promote the implementation of the
Vientiane Action Programme (VAP) on ASC (ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting
2017). This initial meeting was marred though by the absence of the Myanmar minister,
an action that has become a continual act of revolt from the organization. In an act of
protest, the Myanmar government did not attend ASEAN’s inaugural Defence Ministers’
Meeting, its leaders have often given greater cooperation to the UN than to ASEAN. The
Myanmar government, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), “maintained a
practice of making embarrassing announcements at highly sensitive moments for ASEAN
– such as announcing the continuation of Aung San Suu Kyi’s (a political dissident)
detention just days prior to the ASEAN Summit in Kuala Lumpur” (Roberts 2012, 185).
Christopher B. Roberts, of the Australian National University, looks at the motivations
and challenges of regional integration in ASEAN Regionalism – Cooperation, Values, and
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Institutionalization. The capability of a single government to flex its individual will
within the organization illustrates the anarchic view of states being the primary actors of
realism, and that they view the association as a means to an end for their own gain. This
behavior is best explained by the realist paradigm. The political elite of Myanmar do not
identify with ASEAN and thus the regime continues to conduct its relations without
regard to regional. The political stability and credibility of Myanmar’s government
reached the United Nations Security Council under the auspice of the Responsibility to
Protect, despite ASEAN’s protests that the regional organization could handle the matter
internally and fearful that this could establish a larger precedent of external influence
over the RIGO and its members. “The apex of this frustration was reached when
Myanmar asked ASEAN to defend it from UN action and Singapore’s Foreign Minister
responded that ASEAN has lost both the ‘credibility and ability’ to do so” (Roberts 2012,
187).
Incompatibilities latent in the institution
While there is strong support for the ASEAN Regional Forum, it has been unable
to settle many critical issues in the region, such as unresolved territorial disputes,
conflicting maritime jurisdictions resulting from the 1982 UN Law of the Sea, and
nuclear weapons proliferation, all of which have been addressed in discussion but remain
unable to be resolved. Unlike a pact of mutual defense in a hard security organization, the
forum has long held a strong principle promoting peaceful treaty resolution between its
members, ASEAN’s 1976 Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, that calls for renouncing
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force to settle disputes. Members of the forum have signed on to respect the treaty
regarding non-aggression towards members of ASEAN. ARF was instrumental in
promoting the ASEAN Convention on Counter-Terrorism (ACCT) of 2007 effort after
the series of bombings throughout the region in the early 21st century.
ASEAN has used regional incorporation, mainly through efforts of economic
integration, as its main focus towards bringing internal and external stability. Since
ASEAN’s introduction, it has established a preference of non-aggression pacts rather than
forming militaristic alliances. The first meeting of the ASEAN Regional Forum in 1994
seeking to expand diplomatic efforts in the region was not the organization’s only
initiative. ASEAN Plus Three (China, Japan, and South Korea) held its first meeting in
1997, and ASEAN Plus Six (Australia, India, and New Zealand) in 2005, with the goal of
expanding cooperation through economic trade. These efforts culminated with the
creation of the East Asia Summit in 2005, which in addition to the existing members
expanded to include the United States and Russia as well, though ASEAN Plus Three still
exists as a separate institution. In its meeting in June 2017, APT ministers pledged
strengthen cooperative efforts in both traditional and non-traditional security areas
including “terrorism and violent extremism, transnational crime, cyber security, maritime
security, climate change, disaster management, sustainable water resource management,
food security, energy security, and pandemic diseases and trade-related building”
(ASEAN Secretariat Information Paper 2017). Similar pledges have been made in the
past but have seen little progress. The work of organizations like the ASEAN Plus Three
Food Security Information System have shown commendable efforts to increase crop
yields. The overall regional political security is deteriorating from low trust levels
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between members. While China’s economic rise did not initially disrupt the region, as it
has sought to use its position of strength to leverage its will over maritime rights and seek
hegemonic power, it has created a schism with the existing dominant influence of the
United States. APT has not been able to abate these concerns, and ASEAN seeks to
maintain its neutrality.
While the inclusion of large powers will grant potential for expanded economic
and diplomatic avenues, the combative nature of many of these states dampers
multilateral efforts towards regional issues, such as natural disasters, climate change, and
fishing rights; it will also prevent any form of security institution being shaped within
these forums. Simon notes the influence that external state preferences have had on the
role with which ASEAN should proceed for ARF. While China’s reserve reflects a
concern towards basic national security issues such as its the future of Taiwan to not be
subject to ARF deliberations, in contrast Canada, Australia, Japan, and the United States
would like to see ARF’s role strengthened. While the United States in particular hope that
the forum will come to serve as an antiterror cooperative mechanism, ARF’s consensus
rule, an extension of ASEAN values, has proven an obstacle in addressing tensions that
arise from diverging interests. Yet, the rule of consensus was as significant for
encouraging states to adopt membership in ARF just as it was with the establishment of
ASEAN. Caught between the competition of China and the United States, both seeking to
expand their power in the region, ARF will have increasing difficulty moderating
discussions and conflict resolutions.
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The Treaty of Amity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia was established by the
founding members of ASEAN to promote peaceful resolutions to disputes and to build
stronger relationships through collaborative efforts. Since the signing in 1976, many
states outside ASEAN and some outside of the regions have signed. In 2003 during the
Bali Concord II, the treaty was amended for the third time to form the High Council. The
role of the High Council, consisting of a minister from each signatory party, not only
member states within ASEAN, is to seek a peaceful resolution to disputes compared to a
judgment arbitration system such as the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague.
An ASEAN principle ingrained into the process is the requirement for consensus. This is
significant as it makes larger states more willing to come to the table, with China and
India both signing in 2003 and the United States in 2009. Many of the members of the
treaty have contentious relations with other members, so establishing an additional
diplomatic channel acts as a potential positive step towards resolution. However, to date
the High Council has not been utilized. “ASEAN needs to upgrade itself into a more
effective regional organization with a more powerful High Council so as to ensure the
legacy of its continuing existence. Without modifying its policies and bureaucratic
procedures, ASEAN will fail not only in settling the South China Sea dispute, but also in
future challenges” (Tong 2016). Another attempt to change ASEAN’s regional
diplomacy methods was made in 1999 with efforts to create an ASEAN Troika, an
impromptu assembly of foreign ministers in response to urgent matters of regional peace
and stability. The intention was to formulate recommendations to ASEAN Foreign
Ministers, operating in accordance with the core principles of the association, consensus
and non-interference. Indonesia and the Philippines rejected the Troika as a means to
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address secessionist conflicts, nor was it activated regarding the border clashes with
Thailand. Lacking actual implementation of the Troika, and without any institutionalized
obligations, ASEAN’s secretariat will continue to remain constrained by national
secretariats. Meanwhile, states have still not resorted to the TAC’s High Council.
Without being more willing to assert its institutional agencies and risk shifting away from
the ingrained tradition of requiring a consensus for all actions, ASEAN will not be able to
effectively establish its own priorities.
Regional challenges such as terrorism, exploitation of oceanic natural resources,
and maritime security all require multinational cooperation. Unease remains between
members as they continue to seek military parity between each other, maintaining a
balance in the region. Several members maintain bilateral cooperation with external
states, such as the United States and Australia, for support on issues such as counter-
terrorism “Security services appear to compete more than collaborate, as domestic
politics (such as concerns with Muslim constituencies in Indonesia) and obsessive
concerns with national sovereignty foil both bilateral and multilateral regional security
strategies” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 10). This is showing some signs of change though
as, after repeated efforts endeavored by the United States, ASEAN members have agreed
upon increasing levels of cooperation, including the 2007 Convention on
Counterterrorism. As ASEAN continues to transition away from its concept of a
ZOPFAN, there remains little intent to wield any traditional hard power policies within
the organization as the lack of interoperability between armed forces in the region,
entrenched suspicions regarding the motivations in neighboring states, as well as an
unwillingness to coordinate effective strategies to address transnational challenges have
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led to security efforts to bilateral arrangements by default. The Association of Southeast
Asian Nations possesses neither the political will nor the capability to constitute a hard
security organization.
The institutional difficulty of the organization is apparent from the association’s
regional turmoil in the late 1990s. ASEAN experienced severe difficulty in its attempts to
respond to the financial crisis as well as the secession of East Timor from Indonesia, the
public health issues across the region caused by the annual forest fire haze from the
Borneo island of Indonesia, and the coup in Cambodia that overturned an ASEAN-
endorsed election. The source of the organization’s inability to respond effectively is
rooted in the principle of noninterference in its members’ domestic affairs. This has made
crisis response more difficult, for example when attempting to organize humanitarian
response after Cyclone Nagris devastated Myanmar in 2008. The organization had neither
the logistical integration to respond in a timely manner nor the will, unless accepted by
the Myanmar government, which had been very reluctant for international intervention,
despite the desperation of its people.
Moving to rectify this weakness has been a main effort for ASEAN in the early
21st century. The institutionalized principle of noninterference is at the core of the
organizational inability to deal effectively with these issues. Since its establishment in
1967, ASEAN has been grounded in the values of consultation, consensus, and
noninterference when it comes to its member’s internal affairs, as well as any
disagreements between each other. The preservation of sovereignty has been a significant
factor among the states; requiring consensus in decisions was a way to reassure members
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from the fears of being compelled into unwanted policies, and to defuse tensions without
conflict. “ASEAN’s approaches to conflict were not geared to external threats but rather
to helping its members achieve regime security vis-à-vis their neighbors through
confidence-building via consultations” (Simon 2007, 2-3). The rise of extremism in the
region found the governments incapable of responding to the rising security threats with a
bomb plot in Singapore in 2002, the bombings of Bali in 2002 and Jakarta in 2003,
followed by the 2004 bombing of the Australian embassy in Jakarta, and a second
bombing in Bali in 2005. Only after this escalation in violence was an increased effort
placed on coordinating law enforcement efforts undertaken in the region. The unique
threat created by terrorism could push the organization towards a more integrated and
cohesive security agenda as non-state actors that can operate transnationally necessitate a
greater degree of collaboration than the institute has previously been willing to adopt.
Though the efforts towards increasing the levels of integration within ASEAN
have made marked progress over the last four decades, numerous hurdles remain. Several
qualities are necessary for separate agents to see integration such as basic underlying
preferences, willingness to share sovereignty by the leadership, internal demand for
increased economic incorporation, or an external threat to the region and its continued
growth. Min-hyung Kim explores in Theorizing ASEAN Integration, that unlike the
European Union which made steady steps towards economic cooperation from the
beginning, ASEAN did not see any significant development until the 1990s. This article
reviews existing research into this slow process and provides a strategic-preference
theory that analyzes the focus of individual members in the organization and placing
them within the context of the global political economy. The core theory is that existing
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accounts that merely apply insights of general international relations theories on to
ASEAN integration are limited in explaining this process. By not factoring the unique
regional and country circumstances these accounts only serve to highlight various
systemic variables. Thus, they do not factor in the strategic preferences of ASEAN
members that are essential towards understanding political forces of regional integration.
Pressure for integration will have to come from multiple actors across multiple political
and economic levels, “successful integration requires not just demand from market actors
but also supply from political actors – the existence of an undisputed leader among the
group of states seeking closer ties” (Kim 2011, 413). Indonesia has been filling the
guiding position within the organization, though as mentioned before, this is not a
designated position, much in the same way that Germany has been a driving force behind
the integration efforts within the European Union.
Even recent accounts that stress the economic and political issues at the domestic
level do not show the complete picture. Kim hypothesizes that strategic preferences
within ASEAN states, resulting from both their domestic politics, specifically concerns
by the elites’ over sovereignty and regime security, and their degree of economic
interdependence, should be a significant variable in the explanation of the ASEAN
integration process over its history as well as recent agreements to deepen integration.
While free trade efforts in North America and Europe are indicative of their long history
of heavy intraregional trade efforts, the Southeast Asian states do not share a similar
history, instead focusing primarily on trade efforts with more developed Western powers.
This is a lasting impact of the colonial history in the region. Another lasting effect of
colonialism is a deep-rooted protection of state sovereignty, which from the inception of
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the regional organization has been a constant hurdle during every negotiation as members
have been unwilling to cede any degree of their sovereignty to any regional institution.
This is in keeping with the tradition of the ‘ASEAN Way,’ promoting the ideals of
respect for national sovereignty and non-interference in domestic affairs, a value that has
been reaffirmed in many of the association’s declarations and even in the 2007 Charter.
Though ASEAN leaders share, to varying levels, the perception that deeper integration
could serve to invigorate ASEAN’s economy by improving efficiency and promoting
complementarity efforts among ASEAN members which would increase the level of
intraregional trade, the lack the political will for it will not materialize if it is perceived to
threaten the survival of their regime. It is uncertain if ASEAN will be able, or willing, to
make the necessary steps that would be required for further integration. Efforts by
individual members for bilateral trade agreements undermine the political strength of the
association as its own entity. Efforts such as ASEAN Plus Three/Six, which pursued
economic cooperation with larger regional powers, has instead hindered ASEAN
integration by pushing regional trade and investment away from Southeast Asia and
toward China. Though some progress towards that has been made as they have recently
outlined clearer goals for a unified market system and arranged to delegate some policy
authority to a regional institution by adopting a more rules-based system, including
enforcement mechanisms to ensure the implementation. The largest hurdle though is
having members give up their sovereignty for a collective security outside of economics.
This could change in the presence of a significant external threat.
What we have learned from a realist perspective analysis of ASEAN is that it
functions under the principle of neo-contingency. The institution is intrinsically reactive,
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contingency driven rather than conceptually driven. The member countries have used
ASEAN not so much to engage in hard or soft security building, but as a site of
information and signal gathering. Continuing to iterate policies and plans from lessons
learned more than strategizing future scenarios.
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Chapter VI: Is ASEAN a Liberal Economic Community
What would a liberal economic community entail
The sixth principle in the ASEAN charter, ‘effective cooperation among
themselves,’ illustrates the advantages seen in collaborative efforts between member
states and throughout the region in order to advance the socio-economic needs at home.
The strong emphasis on diplomacy over military strength, a core tenant of liberalism, has
served to make ASEAN an intermediary between many of the larger actors in the region,
giving the group considerably more clout. With ASEAN, the pursuit of economic gains
has remained a core principle within the organization. Through cooperative efforts, such
as the Asia-Pacific Economic Community, ASEAN Regional Forum, ASEAN Free Trade
Area, ASEAN Plus Three/Six, the organization has made contentious efforts to expand
economic integration throughout the region, and with it, enhanced stability for all.
Economic and social communities are traditionally established in order to coordinate
fiscal strategies and efforts, establishing trade agreements such as liberal practices like
free trade pacts that give economic advantages to regional economies while handicapping
external products. This is in opposition to protectionism, which utilizes tariffs and strict
import quotas so as to disadvantage foreign goods in domestic markets. Regional free
trade pacts, the Mercado Común del Sur and the North American Free Trade Association
or more intertwined initiatives such the African Union and the European Union, give the
trade partners an advantage over other states which can serve to bolster the region’s
stability as a whole.
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Liberalism focuses on the gains to be made through increasing levels of
institutionalization of inter-governmental cooperation, for instance, the establishment of
regional organizations that create free trade areas. Its focus extends from economics to
political and religious liberties as well. Neoliberalism emphasis remains on the economic
gains to be made through the removal of barriers through globalization efforts, such as
deregulation and increasing privatization. This chapter will examine ASEAN’s stated
intentions and efforts towards establishing itself as an economic community. Have its
member states universally approved these efforts or has there been uneven adoption?
Have non-member states in the region embraced ASEAN as an economic hub, or is it
viewed more as a rival power?
Evidence of liberalist based economic community
Economic-community
In addition to security alliances, trade and economics are among the most
significant motives for states to seek joining regional organizations. Imports/exports can
bring much needed supplies and capital into an economy, as well as allow for more
focused manufacturing efforts if a market is not closed off and needing to provide all
products ‘in house.’ A major hindrance to trade is wading through the myriad of bilateral
trade laws between all participating nations; an example of this is the ‘Noodle Bowl
Syndrome,’ where if you were to place the hundreds of overlapping trade deals of the
East Asian countries onto a map, it would resemble a massive mess of noodles. A free
trade agreement that is region wide would substantially reduce the amount of time and
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finances that states and companies would have to spend getting through the ‘noodle
bowl.’ Singapore and Thailand have been strong supporters of increasing the utilization
of free trade agreements within and outside the region, signaling a potential bilateral
alliance on economic policies. “This bilateralism—based on both the deeper strategic
intentions embedded in their foreign economic policies and wider international political
economy considerations—is underpinning region-divergent outcomes within Southeast
Asia” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 18). Regional free trade agreements, such as the North
American Free Trade Agreement or the European Union Free Trade Agreement, each
bring with them their own regulations and requirements, but changing industry laws for
an overarching system is less taxing than those of a myriad of smaller systems. The
market access that comes with these agreements can help states’ economies, but it does
come with political and economic risks.
With the economic transactions comes cultural trade as well. These exchanges
will help cultivate a regional identity as the separate cultures increasingly overlap. Shared
experiences within the region create sympathetic bonds, though depending on that history
also risk high levels of animosity. These common bonds serve to foster a sense of
community that is essential for long-term cooperation. This community would be
demonstrated by strong social networks that are capable of bridging national boundaries
as well as strategic thinking that recognizes shared security interests, and importantly a
regional identity that is capable of superseding national identities. The historical nature of
the regional order in East Asia leads to this form of consolidated regionalism to remains
highly problematic. The difficulties of navigating a region towards a more united cultural
identity cannot be overstated; the hurdles of overcoming decades if not centuries of
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history, both positive and negative, into a sense of trust will take substantial time and
effort. “The challenge of constructing a South-East Asian community (identity) was
evident in a survey of 100 elites from all 10 ASEAN nations, wherein 59.8% of the
respondents indicated that they could not ‘trust their neighbours to be good neighbours’”
(A. T. Tan 2013, 454). Many members of ASEAN still rely upon outside states,
specifically the United States, for support even with domestic issues such as insurgencies.
While there is potential for greater integration, there is little political or cultural will to
support it.
ASEAN Free Trade
While improving economic conditions has been a stated goal of ASEAN from its
initial inception, its efforts towards this were scattered at first and have only gained
momentum in the last several decades. The 1976 signing of the Treaty of Amity and
Cooperation in Southeast Asia at the first ASEAN summit, held in Bali, established the
initial foundation for later economic integration efforts, initially between ASEAN
members and then later allowed for inclusion of non-Southeast Asian states after being
amended in 1987 and again in 1998. Though primarily focused on political cooperation,
it promoted greater economic collaboration, under the notion that economic integration
promotes stronger deterrence from conflict. Within the Bangkok Declaration of 1967,
economic cooperation was positioned as one of the organization’s pivotal objectives with
several efforts made towards shifting the organization towards this goal. One of the first
steps was tariff reduction to promote trade and improve economic ties but the
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negotiations were drawn-out. Only in 1977 did ASEAN produced its first preferential
trading arrangement. “The Cambodian crisis of the late 1970s and the following decade
strengthened ASEAN’s habit of consultation and co-operation. The perceived common
threat rallied the ASEAN countries into joint actions to secure peace and stability, from
which economic prosperity was derived” (Lee 2011, 87).
Efforts towards establishing the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation were initially
resisted by ASEAN, which counter-proposed an East Asia Economic Caucus, seeking to
exclude non-Asiatic states, including traditionally strong bilateral trading partners such as
the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand (Ganesan 1999). The caucus,
which was to be made up of ASEAN states as well as China, Japan, and the Republic of
Korea, was rejected by Japan and criticized by the United States. While this initiative
floundered, never officially starting, it in many ways served as a precursor for the
ASEAN Plus Three organization.
The first meeting of APEC was held in November 1989, with the first annual
APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting beginning in 1993. The membership of APEC has
expanded from the original twelve states to the current twenty-one, with several potential
candidacies on the horizon. Significantly, India was denied membership but granted
observer status. The role of APEC has been to enable smoother transactions between
Pacific states, including the creation of the APEC Business Advisory Council in 1995,
and has worked to promote free trade with the 2006 proposal of the Free Trade Area of
the Asia-Pacific (FTAAP). The goal of the FTAAP was to untangle the massive amount
of separate free trade agreements in the region. By 2012 ASEAN Plus Six alone had three
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hundred thirty-nine separate overlapping and conflicting agreements creating a ‘noodle
bowl’ effect, with hundreds more proposed throughout the Pacific (Brilliant 2007).
Efforts are still ongoing to improve the situation. For a while the Trans-Pacific
Partnership was seen as a possible step in the right direction though its fate is currently
unclear.
The ASEAN Free Trade Area (AFTA) was established in January 1992
(Association of Southeast Asian Nations 1992) by the six member states at the time but
now includes all ten current members. The four states that joined ASEAN after AFTA
was established, Viet Nam (1995), Laos and Myanmar (1997), and Cambodia (1999),
were allowed longer periods to implement the required tariff reductions with the original
states to meet the obligation of zero tariffs in 2010 and the new members in 2015.
Though a partial extension was given on some tariffs, “flexibility was accorded to the
four newest members to have three more years from 2015 to 2018 for keeping some of
their tariffs at the 0-5% tariff rate instead of reducing all the Inclusion List tariffs to zero
by 2015” (Lee 2011, 109). This system, the Common Effective Preferential Tariff, only
requires the tariff limitations on trade between ASEAN members. Foreign trade is subject
to tariff rates dictated by individual governments. The ASEAN Secretariat only has the
authority to monitor compliance of AFTA. All enforcement and disputes are handled by
national government’s trade and custom authorities; a symptom of states’ unwillingness
to cede any authority. Disputes are commonly handled informally as the protocols for
Senior Economic Officials Meetings require resolutions to be resolved through unanimity
between all ten members, including the affected parties. Alternatively, states have taken
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disputes to the World Trade Organization or the International Court of Justice for
arbitration.
Complimentary efforts to AFTA have been made in the institution to create an
internal common market to capitalize on the exchange of goods, services, and labor.
Improving trade and keeping capital within ASEAN will give it greater abilities for
investment. This will be a significant shift from the contemporary foreign exchange
efforts which predominantly involve trading to states outside of the associations. As of
2010, only Laos and Myanmar had a majority of their exports going to ASEAN members
with 80% and 50% respectively, while as a whole the association’s members’ exports to
foreign countries is 80% (ANTARA News 2011). ASEAN currently has separate free
trade agreements for China, India, Japan, Korea, and one for Australia and New Zealand
together. Talks have recently begun towards establishing free trade agreements within
APT. Since 2012 there has been an ongoing effort made for launching the Regional
Comprehensive Economic Partnership which includes all six states with which ASEAN
already has free trade agreements as well as the East Asia Summit, which has been
working towards a trade agreement under the title Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership for East Asia. These efforts are gaining more traction following the United
States’ withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership. “RCEP will boast a population of
3.4 billion people – more than half coming from India and China – with a total gross
domestic product of $49.5 trillion or about 39 percent of the world’s GDP” (Hunt 2017).
From a liberalist perspective, ASEAN has made efforts towards establishing itself
as an economic and political hub, but its institutions remain effectively weak in their
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current implementation with little means of control or enforcement. A neoliberalist
standpoint, focusing on efforts to bring closer economic cooperation through capitalism,
shows prospect. The establishment of free trade areas has increased overall levels of
income in the region, but the ‘noodle bowl’ of overlapping trade deals creates barriers to
trade and migration. It has also exposed the region to greater market and societal risks.
Evolution of regional economics
Asian Financial Crisis
The 1997 Asian Financial Crisis has been one of the toughest tests of ASEAN’s
abilities to respond to prolonged emergencies. Most members of ASEAN were hit, with
Indonesia and Thailand suffering the worst of the effects, with Laos, Malaysia, and the
Philippines taking a moderate hit, while Brunei, Singapore, and Viet Nam were less
affected. Outside of ASEAN, other states within the region were impacted as well. While
South Korea was significantly affected, China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan suffered more
from decline in demand for trade as the crisis went on. Japan held the world’s largest
currency reserves at that time and was able to stave off the more serious problems and
recovered quickly (Yamazawa 1998, 342).
Preceding the economic bubble bursting, attempts by finance ministers at the third
meeting of APEC in March 1996 to negotiate an increase to the quantity of sums
available for the Emergency Finance Mechanism failed. The 30th ASEAN Ministerial
Meeting, held in July 1997, issued a joint declaration that expressed growing concern and
called for increasing cooperation to safeguard economic security (ASEAN Ministerial
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Meeting 1997). The inability for ASEAN to adequately institute policies and safeguards
to stave off risks that were becoming increasingly apparent is symptomatic of the
entrenched value of non-interference in domestic policies.
As the crisis began to unfold, domestic governments sought to prevent a potential
currency collapse due to flight of capital by raising domestic interest rates and purchasing
back high volumes of domestic currencies at fixed exchange rates. These were costly
short-term efforts that did more harm than good. As central banks were being drained of
reserves, the flow of capital out of the country could not be stopped, thus governments
conceded to let their currencies float, which led to rampant depreciation and wide-spread
bankruptcies, expanding the crisis. As domestic currency values dropped, loans pegged to
the United States dollar grew increasingly unpayable leaving many businesses and
municipalities to default. Investor panic led to an increasing exodus and trade in the
region plummeted.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) had to step in with a series of aid
packages to the states most at risk of defaulting. The economic aid was provisional on the
requirement of significant reforms to government oversight of the market systems. While
some of the larger economic powers in the region have returned or surpassed their former
market levels, many of the smaller states remain below pre-1997 levels. Given the failure
of domestic and regional powers to stave off the worst of the crisis, it is arguable that the
involvement by the IMF was necessary, but it was still resented by many as interference
by foreign powers, especially Western former-colonial nations.
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One result of the financial crisis was the creation of a currency swap agreement
between the members of ASEAN Plus Three at the 33rd annual meeting of the board of
governors to the Asian Development Bank in May 2000. The meeting was held in Chiang
Mai, Thailand, to establish bilateral agreements in order to prevent a future financial
crisis, titled the Chiang Mai Initiative. This effort would also serve to complement
international financial institutions, such as the IMF. The Chiang Mai Imitative
Multilateralism agreement was signed in 2009 and went into effect on March 2010. The
reserve pool was originally set at a level of 78 billion (USD), but it was agreed to be
elevated to 120 billion in 2008, then doubled to 240 billion in 2012 after launching
(Ministry of Strategy and Finance 2010). At its current levels, members can collect up to
30 billion from the reserve pool.
Integration via regionalism instead of bilateralism/multilateralism
The strong push for multilateralism and open markets, through efforts such as the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and its successor, the World Trade
Organization, have been at the forefront of the North American and European initiatives
to promote a global integration through economic trade. Globalization aims to create a
unitary political and economic space, but in the vast global community many smaller
states feel their value lessens as their individual relative impact diminishes. This
incentivizes the formation of regional blocs to strengthen their position through collective
bargaining. While membership in multilateral organizations such as the WTO grows, so
too does the expansion of its biggest obstacle, regionalism through smaller economic
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blocs. “Industries at a comparative disadvantage globally might nonetheless enjoy a
comparative advantage within their region; their governments would thus encounter less
domestic resistance to regional arrangements” (Paul 2012, 139). The comparatively small
membership of a region bloc does give smaller powers the chance for a larger voice, but
it does not necessarily remove the risk of being pressured in to unfavorable agreements
by larger states; for example, when forming the North American Free Trade Association,
the strength and solidity of Canadian and United States economies allowed them leverage
when negotiating terms with Mexico.
Persisting rivalries
The continuing efforts to implement free trade agreements within ASEAN,
allowing for lenient timelines for the newer members, as well as broader bilateral and
multilateral agreements throughout the region serves as a strong indicator of
neoliberalism. These trade agreements with states such as China, Japan, and South Korea
individually, as well as increasingly through regional treaties, demonstrate the acceptance
of regional powers embracing ASEAN as an economic hub. Yet the position of the AEC
to maintain a strong division between economic policies and political ones serves to
illustrate a high level of distrust throughout the economic community of outside
influences.
Viet Nam serves as an example of strained relationships within the ASEAN
community. Viet Nam has faced ongoing trade deficits with Thailand that have led to
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some tensions. “In January 2008 alone, Vietnamese exports to and imports from Thailand
were recorded at USD $109 million and USD $372 million respectively, a 58.0 and 45.2
per cent increase as compared with 2007 figures” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 80).
Additionally, the two states appear to compete in some areas such as rice export and
foreign investment. However, they may not necessarily engage in direct economic
competition due to Thailand being more developed than Viet Nam and some view efforts
of depicting Viet Nam as a potential economic rival has been mainly for domestic
consumption in Thailand. Viet Nam has also had political disputes with Cambodia, with
many still bitter from its invasion to dislodge the Khimar Rouge government. Two
persisting matters remain at the heart of disputed issues, territorial disputes and the
situation of ethnic Vietnamese remaining within Cambodia. There has been notable
progress towards improving bilateral relations in recent years, such as with the managing
of border disputes. Talks at high-levels have shown that the current governments are
willing to move relations forward. The main desire of both states has been increasing
economic relations. Disputes over maritime rights remain, but there is growing potential
for cooperation to develop the relationship, if the efforts can be sustained.
What we have learned from a liberalistic perspective analysis of ASEAN is that it
functions under the principle of institutional isomorphism. ASEAN does not conform to a
binding interdependence that a liberal approach would adhere to. Instead member
countries have used ASEAN in an opportunistic and heterogenous manner, changing
preferences towards free-trade, whether they favor bilateral or multilateral agreements.
Liberal interdependence marches along a path defined by the previous two steps, not by
some lofty goal in the distance. Progress towards liberalization has happened gradually as
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organic reaction to events, rather than long-tern planning efforts. Results of these steps
are inherent unpredictably.
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Chapter VII: Is ASEAN a Constructivist Rights community
What would a constructivist rights community entail
The shared rich cultural history of the Asia-Pacific has served to create the
institutions built upon by ASEAN. The interactions throughout the region develop their
own inertia in the behavioral development of a state. A constructivist explanation of
Southeast Asia’s diversity states that each of ASEAN’s norms are shaped to generate an
institution uniquely suited to solving the region’s specific problems. “While states
initially cooperate to fulfil individual motives – for example, because certain goals cannot
be pursued unilaterally – this can only explain initial, short-term cooperation. It does not
account for long-term collaboration” (Parekh 2014). China’s implementation of a
tributary system throughout much of the region, an extension of its internal practices with
its provinces, still influences its perception of other states and how interactions are meant
to be performed. An interaction most Asian states have gone through in their history is
that of foreign powers claiming to be more advanced and imbuing their culture onto the
indigenous populations. This not only alters the cultural and technological levels of the
society, but also shapes its view towards future interactions with other powers, as well as
a cultural understanding with other subjected Asian states. This commonality is a leading
factor behind the formation of ASEAN, that the smaller states have more to gain when
they work together, even if they do not necessarily like one another. The behavior of
ASEAN and its members are a product of their history. The region’s history is full of
periods of colonization, from actors within and outside the region, as well as oppressive
rule and authoritarian governments. The member states continue to seek moderate levels
of military parity even though the foundations of the organization prohibit any military
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action against another member. Even when members may have tensions between each
other, they still participate in summits and have continued seeking to resolve differences
nonviolently.
“Norms not only establish expectations about how particular actors will behave,
they also ‘teach’ states, which are exposed to norms, new interests and identities”
(Acharya 2001, 24). The high levels of cultural interaction and trade have served to form
stronger norms at all levels. The continuous interactions between the states and their
cultures has served towards the establishment of a shared identity, ‘the ASEAN Way.’
This identity has taken on several forms, from the social effort to create a stronger unified
culture to the political form, characterized by the informal approach that aims at
preventing conflict and is often not carried out in public. As ASEAN states continue to
practice regional norms between one another, it serves to reaffirm the identity of the
member and its collective. Through this process of socialization, states have been able to
gloss over many of the historical disputes of the region. “In the post-Cold War era,
ASEAN’s norms have nevertheless been tested and frayed over issues such as
membership expansion, non-interference in matters of political economy, and human
rights and democratization debates” (Acharya and Buzan 2010, 139).
The constructivist approach emphasizes the importance and interactions of norms,
values, and identities, seeking to analyze what practices have become regional norms,
serving towards shaping that shared cognitive identity. Long standing norms have been
difficult to change rapidly, thus if ASEAN were to be viewed through a constructivist
lens it would have challenges developing historical norms to evolving issues. This
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chapter will analyze how the association’s rules have changed to answer social issues,
specifically the increasing global awareness towards human rights, as well as how the
established norms have responded to handle crises. How have the established political
norms reacted to the involvement of inter-government and non-governmental
organizations or the creation of civil society organizations throughout the region?
Evidence of constructivist based rights community
Bangkok Declaration
At a ministerial meeting of Asian states held in Bangkok in March to April in
1993, the representatives walked a fine line in creating what became known as the
‘Bangkok Declaration.’ The meeting, which included states as far west as Iran, solidified
a statement that would represent Asian views before the coming World Conference on
Human Rights to be held that June in Vienna. The declaration promoted the notion of
human rights but at the same time objected to the concept of universal rights without
recognizing cultural and regional backgrounds. “[They] recognize that while human
rights are universal in nature, they must be considered in the context of a dynamic and
evolving process of international norm-setting, bearing in mind the significance of
national and regional particularities and various historical, cultural and religious
backgrounds” (The Ministers and Representatives of Asian States 1993, 1). While the
ministers did recognize the Charter of the United Nations and the principles of human
rights, they stressed the importance of sovereignty and respect for ‘Asian values’ in their
application. The global response to the Bangkok Declaration has been tepid. While the
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acknowledgment of the need for human rights has been viewed positively, the concern
raised over the issue of the universality has been subdued by the position of strength in
the negotiations the Asian states gained by fortifying their position before the World
Conference.
Human rights and equality
In 2000, the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1325, its first
policies for protection for Women, Peace and Security (WPS), to show its commitment to
promoting practices that enable women to participate in all affairs of peace and security.
Over time, seventy-four countries have adopted similar plans, but only two of the ten
members of ASEAN signed (Peace Women 2018), despite the many claims from states in
the region to uphold women's rights. In Women, Peace and Security as an ASEAN
Priority, Sara E. Davies, Kimberly Nackers, and Sarah Teitt argue for the need of
ASEAN to adopt policies pertaining to women and how ASEAN implementing policies
to uphold women as central agents will enhance peace and security in society, as well as
future policy proposals. In their view, the region has made significant institutional
statements regarding the protection of women’s human rights and preventing violence
against women. However, it still does not address these in relation to regional security.
In members of ASEAN, there continues to be high levels of violent crimes against
women, despite claims by local governments towards their growing value in society.
“The poor scores of ASEAN countries concerning the economic empowerment, health
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and political status of women may be explained, in part, by its membership’s violent
history” (Davies, Nackers and Teitt 2014, 336). Though they are continuing efforts for
political transition and restructuring, women are typically not included in these processes
beyond a supportive role. Indonesia and the Philippines are among the nations who have
WPS policies implemented, but the low number of women in state government inhibits
change from happening at a quicker pace and being implemented as nations rebuild,
making transition easier for the future. In 2009 ASEAN developed and passed a
declaration against violence on women and children which includes a survey to see how
extensive the problem is. This was a strong step in providing women the opportunity to
gain access to economic independence and greater contributions to society. However,
despite this policy ASEAN has done little beyond its creation to uphold the rights they
state they want their nations' women to enjoy.
The 21st summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in 2012 brought
the adoption of the ASEAN Human Rights Declaration. This was viewed as a significant
shift for the region as member states were not affiliated with the existing international
human rights institutions that have increased in significance over the last forty years of
ASEAN’s existence, though many of its members lacked the internal laws and policies to
safeguard human rights that have come to prevalence throughout many other regions.
Nicholas Doyle concludes in ASEAN Human Rights Declaration and the Implications of
Recent Southeast Asian Initiatives in Human Rights Institution-Building and Standard-
Setting that these efforts have not only fallen short, but in fact are hurting human rights
efforts in Southeast Asia. While there seems to be much to celebrate in ASEAN’s efforts
toward safeguarding rights, however, there are indications that these new initiatives may
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instead be a distraction and in fact a backwards for human rights protection in the region.
By appearing to address the concerns of international and national bodies regarding
human rights in ASEAN States yet they amount to little more than political rhetoric.
The recommendations from Women, Peace and Security as an ASEAN priority
suggest an ASEAN joint workshop within its communities to discuss engagement in
WPS policies, “by committing to support member states to implement the WPS agenda,
regional arrangements send a strong normative message that success of regional peace
and security institutions will be judged by their responsiveness to the perspectives and
priorities of women” (Davies, Nackers and Teitt 2014, 347). Since current ASEAN
policies only go so far as to bolster women's economic status, these workshops could help
identify ways women can be political facilitators and providers of regional security.
Dialogue between the United Nations and ASEAN can be constructed after these
workshops to see what the nations' next steps should be to involve women in ASEAN
peacekeeping efforts. Then ASEAN can collaborate to write guidelines for regional
institutions and branches in implementing and following better WSP policies and
advance women into peacekeeping matters. By implementing regional treaties, as is the
case with the ASEAN Human Rights Declaration, states gain the positive attention from
the international community without having to submit any authority to adopting
international standards and observance. Pulling from Hathaway’s 2002 report Do Human
Rights Treaties Make a Difference? By ratifying treaties, counties experience a drop in
external pressure for tangible improvement, thus leading to an actual reduction in the
pace of real improvement. It is unclear what levels of external attention and domestic
pressure will aid in furthering adoption and implementation of greater equality practices.
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Rights groups must remain determined, careful from being distracted by placating
resolutions that serve for positive attention from foreign press. Having women’s
representation in all levels of government is the most definitive pursuit for there to be
long term structural change.
Three years after the Thai military overthrow of the government, the country still
suffers from accusations of rampant human rights abuses. Human Rights Watch claims
that thousands of dissidents have been imprisoned and undergone ‘reeducation’ in
military prison camps. The junta National Council for Peace and Order has continued to
prolong its strict authoritarian rule despite pledges to restore democratic rule and respect
human rights. “Key constitutional bodies set up by the NCPO – such as the National
Legislative Assembly – are dominated by military personnel and other junta loyalists,
meaning that there are no effective checks and balances on military rule” (Human Rights
Watch 2017). A newly proposed constitution would safeguard members of the
government from being accountable for any human rights violations since coming to
power as well as further strengthen the military control over the government. Social
forums and academic panels related to human rights are frequently cancelled by
authorities including political gatherings of more than five people. The newly imposed
Computer Related Crime Act has been viewed as a thinly veiled effort to establish
sweeping surveillance and censorship mechanisms.
ASEAN’s response to the coup d’état was poignantly muted. The December
statement by the ASEAN foreign ministers was to express confidence in the resilience of
Thailand to overcome the hardship and their willingness to extend all appropriate support
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based on the principles provided of the ASEAN charter. The most significant statement
came from Indonesia’s Foreign Minister, Marty Natalegawa who said that with respect to
the principle of non-interference in a state’s internal affairs, in regard to the ASEAN
Charter and its emphasis on democratic principles and constitutional government, “the
developments in Thailand merit Indonesia’s and ASEAN’s attention.” No further actions
or statements were made by the RIGO as political unrest and claims of human rights
abuses have continued to persist in Thailand. Non-ASEAN states have had mixed
responses, with China wishing for a return to order, Australia and Japan speaking out of
the need to return to the constitution and rule of law. While the United States stated it
would review its military links to Thailand and has reduced joint training exercises, as of
2017 it is still selling arms, including helicopters.
Since being elected as Philippine President, Rodrigo Duterte has vocally pushed
for stronger actions to be taken to combat the growing drug epidemic. After a bombing
on 3 September 2016, he declared a state of emergency and authorized the armed forces
and national police to prevent the spread of violence. He has also publicly encouraged
citizens to kill those suspected of being criminals or addicts. Previously, while serving as
mayor of Davao City, he was accused of being involved with vigilante death squads and
has even boasted of personally killing. Since launching his ‘War on Drugs,’ he has also
accused and imprisoned several political rivals, including Senator Leila De Lima.
While ASEAN has attempted to thwart the increasing drug problem in the region,
the thirteenth meeting of the ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Assembly’s Fact-Finding
Committee to Combat the Drug Menace, held from the fourth to the sixth of July 2017,
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focused on information sharing and intelligence gathering. The issues of human rights or
high numbers of deaths were not discussed. Isra Sunthornvut, a legislator from Thailand
stated, “The drug menace is a problem for us all. But we're not here to judge anybody.
Everybody has different methods of dealing with the drug menace. So what we're trying
to do is we're trying to learn from one another” (Cepeda 2017). The delegate from the
Philippines reasoned away the existence of ‘collateral damage’ as a result occurring in
any war, having previously stated that over seven thousand drug related suspects had
been killed, with over four thousand of those occurring outside of police operations by
vigilantes. Criticism from outside nations and NGO/IGOs, notably from the United States
under the Obama administration, led to a souring of relations involving personal attacks.
The most significant crisis in modern times for ASEAN has been the brutal ethnic
cleansing of the Muslim Rohingya minority group by the Burmese Armed Forces and the
mass exodus that ensued. Long been discriminated against, an attack by Rohingya
extremists on 9 October 2016 was all it took to justify a massive operation to sweep
through the countryside detaining Muslims and burning down entire villages. Brutal mass
executions and rape have been reported (Slodkowski, et al. 2017). As of September 2017,
neighboring states have seen an influx of over 600,000 fleeing refugees, with the
Burmese government claiming to have killed over a thousand. ASEAN has not taken any
actions to censure the involved governments. At the 30th ASEAN summit on 26 April
2017, the ongoing crisis in Burma was not on the agenda. With little to no enforcement
mechanisms from ASEAN, the power of implementation remains under the sovereignty
of the individual members. Doyle summarizes with a final critique, that while it is often
viewed that some degree of international regime ‘is better than nothing.’ In the case of
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ASEAN though, its initiatives towards human rights might be worse than having none as
the current norm is obstructive. “If the ‘ASEAN Way’ is itself a ‘regional particularity,’ it
is a perverse one in the context of a regional human rights initiative. Like any
international organization, ASEAN is no more than the sum of its parts and it falls to
ASEAN leaders to see that national standards at least achieve parity with international
benchmarks" (Doyle 2014, 98).
Disaster relief
The United Nations Resolution 1674 by the Security Council unanimously
reaffirmed the institution’s support for the Responsibility to Protect, one of the largest
shifts to the notion of state sovereignty since the adoption of the Westphalian System. It
states that it is the responsibility of the state to protect its populace from genocide, war
crimes, ethnic cleansing and any crimes against humanity, and that it is the international
communities’ responsibility to make timely and crucial decisions through peaceful means
and only uses more forceful means consistent with the UN Charter if the former fails.
What has long been the international relations standard of non-interference in domestic
issues, this resolution mandates that it is the duty of the state to safeguard its own people,
and when it is incapable of protecting, or actively involved in threatening its citizens, it is
the duty of the international community to intervene upon their behalf. These changes
have been met with trepidation within the Asian community. The long historical
influence and occupation by European powers raises deep-seated concerns of foreign
intrusion, as ASEAN members are currently concerned more with domestic security than
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expanding their reaches of humanitarian efforts globally. In addition, since many nations
have more authoritarian governments, such as China, there is little political will to
expand into international humanitarian issues.
In The Responsibility to Protect in Southeast Asia: Can ASEAN Reconcile
Humanitarianism and Sovereignty? written by Alex J. Bellamy and Mark Beeson and in
The Responsibility to Protect in Southeast Asia: Between Non-interference and
Sovereignty as Responsibility, also by Bellamy with Catherine Drummond, they review
how the Responsibility to Protect has been a policy of some contradiction for ASEAN as
it has institutionalized around the sovereign rights of state boundaries and regulation,
even in times of humanitarian crises. The ASEAN Charter adopted a compromise
between traditional non-interference policies and a more flexible model towards
achieving the organization's collective goals. The charter maintains the norm of non-
interference and consensus-based decision-making, protecting members from interference
as they can effectively block any action; however, the acceptance of the ASEAN-minus-
X method, which allows states that are not in agreement to opt out of collective decisions
in regard to economic matters, is a significant shift in the voting system that creates an
opening for new policies.
“There was consensus that R2P must not be used to legitimise unilateral coercive
interference in the domestic affairs of states, with Singapore adding that the R2P does not
in itself create any additional legal obligations” (Bellamy and Drummond 2011, 194), and
yet Singapore has later gone on to state that, “narrow notions of sovereignty no longer
hold today” (Bellamy and Drummond 2011, 196). A strong case for the need to reform
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was the devastation and slow response following when the Cyclone Nargis hit Myanmar
in 2008. With over 100,000 dead and roughly 1.5 million left displaced, the Myanmar
government was unable to effectively respond on a significant scale. While international
bodies, states, and non-governmental organizations offered to assist the government’s
relief efforts, the authoritative regime was sluggish in accepting aid. The French
administration sought to invoke R2P, it was rejected by China as well as members of
ASEAN currently serving on the United Nations Security Council, Indonesia and Viet
Nam. Their position was that natural disasters were not covered under the R2P and
maintained that Myanmar should not be pressured into accepting humanitarian assistance,
rejecting the possibility of forcibly delivering supplies without consent. An emergency
meeting of the ASEAN assembly was held and ten days after the cyclone had passed, the
organization sent a small, hastily formed, group as an Emergency Rapid Assessment
Team with consent from the Junta to gain access and coordinate the international relief
and rehabilitation effort. “Despite the lengthy delays in delivering aid supplies and
assistance, the much predicted second round of deaths due to disease and malnutrition
was avoided” (Bellamy and Drummond 2011, 193).
While ASEAN was slow to respond to the crisis, members did deliberate as they
recognized they had an obligation to the people of Myanmar since it was a part of the
RIGO and that the aid that had channeled to the area should have come through ASEAN.
At the 2009 General Assembly, ASEAN gave their endorsement for many of the
elements of the Responsibility to Protect, particularly the promotion of a nation’s
sovereignty while upholding human rights to their citizens, but ASEAN did find dispute
with the third pillar’s requirement of response to crisis regarding interfering in
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international affairs in order to prevent other nations from committing crimes against
humanity. However, the change in tone from complete rejection of the R2P protocols to
willingness for adoption of some of its principles shows an inclination on ASEAN's part
to accommodate humanitarianism alongside upholding its value of non-interference and a
nation's sovereignty. “We need to consider the possibility that organizations like ASEAN
will filter and reconstitute apparently universal ideas or impulses in ways that reflect and
accommodate local conditions” (Bellamy and Beeson 2010, 269).
Lessons taken in the aftermath of Cyclone Nargis have resulted in the
establishment of the Emergency Rapid Assessment Team, whose role is to assess the
disaster and recommend appropriate actions for relief. The ASEAN committee on
Disaster Management in 2011 formed the ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian
Assistance on Disaster Management (AHA Center) with the creed, ‘One ASEAN, One
Response.’ The role of the center is to collect and provide an up-to-date information
database of natural disaster reports within the region as well as conduct joint civilian and
military training for disaster management (Wey 2016). The AHA Center played an
important role in managing responses to the 2013 Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines and
the 2016 Banda Aceh earthquake. In 2017, the role of the center was expanded to include
coordinating efforts with the United Nations and other international organizations relief
efforts both in and outside of Southeast Asia. Though much of the attention was focused
on the U.S. Army plans to coordinate stockpiles of equipment in several ASEAN
countries for future Humanitarian Aid/Disaster Relief (HADR) efforts, “less so, to efforts
by the United States to provide ASEAN with advice as well as software and hardware to
improve the capabilities of the AHA Center” (Parameswaran 2016).
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Environmental governance
Despite the growing importance given to the environment and the effects that
climate change will have throughout Southeast Asia, given the geographical disposition
of the members being predominantly coastal if not islands, there has been very little
attention given to researching governance policies’ impacts in the region. Lorraine Elliot
seeks to fill in some of this void in her paper ASEAN and Environmental Governance:
Strategies of Regionalism in Southeast Asia. Southeast Asia faces a range of
environmental hazards that need to be addressed effectively with degrees of cooperation
in order to avoid the redundant pattern that has occurred previously. Transboundary
problems such as air or marine pollution necessitate shared policy in order to reduce
transaction costs in dealing with them. Industrialization in the region has led to higher
efficiency in crops but the level of concentration has made them more susceptible to soil
pollution from increasingly dense urban and commercial areas with few oversights on
pollution control efforts. A new study published in the journal Environment Research
Letters in 2016 documented the fatalities associated with air pollution caused annually by
forest fires in Indonesia that cover the region for months at a time. “Researchers from
Harvard and Columbia universities estimate that exposure from pollution from last year’s
fires killed 91,600 people in Indonesia, 6,500 in Malaysia, and 2,200 in Singapore in
2015 and 2016” (Parameswaran 2016), though all three governments dispute these
numbers. The Indonesian government records specify only 19 deaths due directly to the
forest fires in 2015, and 500,000 suffering minor health conditions.
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Internal and external policy factors work together to inhibit efforts towards
shifting norms from caustic programs to ones more promoting environmental
stewardship. Domestic structures with states within the region have been predominantly
vertical structures with political and industrial elites at the top able to use their weighted
influence to shape public opinion to favor policies that promote economic expansion with
little oversight. The 1977 adoption of the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation has
institutionalized the policy of non-interference in the internal affairs of other members,
making it much more difficult to attempt regional steps for environmental policy change.
The creation of the ASEAN Ministerial Meeting on the Environment in 1981 gave the
organization an agency towards developing policy recommendations and the ASEAN
Senior Officials on the Environment for promoting regional cooperation. The limit of
cooperation and effectiveness of these offices to control policy was quickly apparent as it
was up to individual states to implement and enforce policies due to them being protected
by the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation as internal policies. Mounting pressure for
governmental change in regulation has risen at the social and elite levels, which has
forced slow changes on the way ASEAN members respond to and govern environmental
problems. Increasingly since the late 1980s, the rising levels of international negotiations
towards environmental protectionism has taken place as a backdrop for the regional
political importance placed on the impact by environmental degradation. In response to
grassroots activism and the growing presence of regional NGOs, “the rule systems of
environmental cooperation expanded from soft-law declarations and resolutions to
include plans of action, issue-specific programs, and two binding multilateral
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environmental agreements. In turn, these changes brought into question ASEAN’s
dominant political norms and practices” (Elliott 2012, 44).
Complex regulatory structures and regional initiatives have been formed in order
to extend control of the existing power structures. The shape of the multilateral
environmental cooperation efforts, reflecting its result from the ASEAN Way, is a
complex association. With each member forming their own internal policy, multilateral
efforts regarding environmental challenges has seen moderate progress comparatively,
including the inclusion of some nongovernmental organizations. Future efforts to expand
cooperation or open policy initiatives to social discussion is uncertain as these efforts
have not been the historical norm. The inclusion of NGOs and the partial flattening of
environmental governance in some trans-governmental arrangements still raises
speculation about whether networked forms of governance will server to increase
transparency. “The counter-argument is that, depending on their form and actor
constellation, transnational networks run the risk of privileging technocrats and experts,
that they can replicate or mask power relationships of various kinds (including those that
blunt the voices of the vulnerable and marginalized), and that they can distort policy
objectives” (Elliott 2012, 53). While the ASEAN regional regime created to address
problems such as the transboundary haze pollution has many positive features, it is still
handicapped by a number of matters, namely the requirement of consensus and
preference towards soft law approaches, making this effort to be unlikely to be successful
in practice.
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Development of rights organizations
Role of IGO/NGOs
As a regional intergovernmental organization, ASEAN has sought to maintain
itself as the central hub for an increasing number of IGOs. The formation of ASEAN Plus
Three, East Asia Summit, ASEAN Economic Community, and the ASEAN Regional
Forum all represent the association’s method of using IGOs to further its goals. Non-
regional entities are not treated so amicably but still are found to be useful. The
International Monetary Fund stepped in with aid packages for several states during the
1997 financial crisis but with the aid came steep restrictions and regulations over fiscal
policies. Some perceived that Asia had lost face by submitting the region to what could
be essentially viewed as ‘Western’ institutions like the IMF and World Bank, that
frustration was compounded by the fact that Western countries on the region’s periphery
did not suffer much of the economic downturn. The IMF was even accused of deepening
the crisis due to its sudden and strict demands to restricting the economy and financial
reforms.
The World Bank provides reports to aid its members on efforts that should be
taken to improve and expand their economies. The October 2017 release of the Migrating
to Opportunity report cited the need to ease barriers of migration throughout the region
that lead to expensive and long recruitment processes and strict quotas on foreign
workers accepted to immigrate. It stated that workers faced mobility costs that were
several times the annual average wage. The improvement of the migration process would
help countries respond better to changing labor market needs. The report shows simulated
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returns of a 10% increase to low-skilled migrant workers resulting in 1.1% increase to the
nation’s GDP. Though foreign calls to change domestic or regional policies have often
been met with much skepticism, those that can demonstrate fiscal advantages have gained
greater traction. Even when policy changes can be seen as advantageous, stark political
shifts in historical and cultural views are very difficult in the region and must be taken
gradually.
For most of its history, ASEAN has been very hesitant towards the presence of
NGOs in the region. Due to the wide range of issues and agendas platformed by NGOs,
ASEAN placed strict guidelines on activities within the region, granting access to those
focused on business and medicine, while blocking ones working in pro-democracy or
human rights fields. ASEAN has been actively courting multinational corporations into
the region, but it has only more recently begun to allow a wider range of organizations to
operate in the region, possibly a result of the series of natural disasters it has suffered.
These organizations, such as Direct Relief, a humanitarian aid organization that is active
in seventy countries worldwide, which recently signed a memorandum to provide
prepositioned emergency medical supplies for ASEAN’s collective response to regional
disasters in coordination with the AHA Center (Parameswaran 2016), have served to
augment ASEAN’s capabilities and assist in areas that have traditionally been difficult to
create cooperation. These network-building efforts have been accompanied by a more
institutionalized engagement with NGOs. The actions by non-governmental organizations
have become increasingly relied upon in supporting ASEAN programs as well as in
facilitating dialogue and sometimes regulations on which governments come to rely.
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“This apparent willingness to work more closely with NGOs and civil society groups in a
formally structured way is new” (Elliott 2011, 63).
Civil society organizations
Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, the Prime Minister of Malaysia from 2003 to 2009,
once stated that, “the ultimate measure of the ASEAN Community’s success depends on
how well the organization has brought change to its 600 million people in the region”
(Hooi 2017). The diverse political structures throughout the Southeast Asian community,
coupled with the varying economic levels, has made it difficult to implement a
comprehensive social outreach to the communities feeling disenfranchised with
government efforts. Rather, it seems more apparent that the states instead are seeking
minimal efforts to placate these groups, if not outright ignore them.
Throughout its early history, ASEAN has sought to repress social activism and
most left-leaning efforts to prevent any undermining of state authority. It was not until
the economic transformations of the 1990s and the devastation of the 1997 economic
crisis that forced change. The crisis obligated the states to seek appeasement to the social
upheaval to prevent a greater collapse of the system. Civil society organizations (CSOs)
were given tacit acceptance, but little official acknowledgment until 2005, which was
seen as a strong step forward for CSOs within ASEAN, as the regional organization
announced recognition of the ASEAN Civil Society Conference/ASEAN Peoples’ Forum
(ACSC/APF) as the formal platform for CSOs to meet with ASEAN leaders at the annual
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summits. While originally stating that CSOs were an important role in the sociocultural
community, in the 2007 ASEAN Charter and its blueprint to 2025, CSOs were not
mentioned. In practice, ASEAN views the role of CSOs as to assist in the implementation
of the already established government policy agendas. The meetings with the state
officials takes place at the end of the summit, after policies have already been discussed
and decided upon, furthermore the meeting is only allocated for fifteen to thirty minutes
(Tadem 2017). States hold authority over approving which CSOs can attend the meeting.
An internal evaluation of the ASEAN Civil Society Conference/ASEAN Peoples’ Forum
found that over the ten years of engagement with ASEAN from 2005 to 2015, individual
member states have consistently resisted civil society participation.
Leading up to the 2015 ASEAN Summit in Malaysia, Lao CSOs came under
pressure to not raise concerns related to human rights under threat to their safety.
Speaking anonymously, an official stated, “[The CSOs] will talk mostly about gender
roles only, but not other issues such as land rights, the impact of hydropower dams …
and enforced disappearance, because they are afraid for their safety” (Souksavanh 2015).
The majority of Lao CSOs did not attend the forum, especially to those pertaining to
human rights, in their place the Lao Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of the
Interior brought other organizations that were ‘irrelevant’ in their place. During the 2017
summit in the Philippines, demonstrations were suppressed while both the police and the
activists claiming the other used violent tactics while they maintained peaceful efforts. In
the end, fifty-six protestors were injured, four seriously, while six police officers were
reported to be hurt (Patag 2017).
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Current leading concerns raised by civil society organizations are inclusion in the
decision-making process, growing levels of inequality between member states, the
decline of democratic values and subsequent rise in authoritarianism, abuses of human
rights and lack of sanctions against violating governments, economic growth centered
around elites, ASEAN states’ focuses on trade competition over complementary
investments, absence of a regional identity, little social protections for residents as well
as migrants; and the continuing inequality between genders.
Based on tradition, mired in the past
While ASEAN has steadily worked towards greater levels of economic
integration in the region and levels of globalization, the individual member states still
seek to retain full levels of sovereignty, not wishing to relinquish control or power. There
have been small steps towards intergovernmental cooperation in regard to issues such as
counter-terrorism and small efforts towards environmental protection as well as notable
efforts by non-governmental organizations in the region. The long standing political and
cultural divisions prevent ASEAN from being considered as having a coherent
encompassing identity throughout the organization as long as the states remain unwilling
to seek higher levels of cooperation. It will take time to determine what levels of
compliance and initiative the individual states take having signed the Paris Agreement in
2016 and what impact this could have on the organization’s internal governance
practices. Allowing signees to set their own ‘nationally determined contributions’
encourages states to take more feasible approaches while still encouraging strides
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towards combating climate change; this self-determined standard will be more palatable
to the developing states that have traditionally rejected foreign imposition on their policy-
making.
When compared to how other RIGOs respond to internal crisis, it is clear just how
non-intrusive ASEAN is in regard to domestic events. In the African Union any member-
state that undergoes unconstitutional changes in power is automatically suspended from
AU activities and given six months to restore constitutional law. Unlike ASEAN, where
the Secretary General is given no true authority to impose influence over sovereign states,
the chairperson and the secretary general of the AU have responsibility to condemn coup
d’états as well as the power to impose sanctions. A comparative analysis of the two
RIGOs shows that regional civil society engagement, supported by democratic
governments and an institutionally strong secretariat, make for more proactive
institutions that are less restrained by the competing interests of individual member
states. Active civil society in Africa, coupled with a network of indigenous lawyers and a
strong secretary general to form its progressive document on democracy and human
rights. It is important to note that, like ASEAN, AU member-states are a mix of
authoritarian and democratic regimes. “Apparently, democratic member-state regimes are
not necessary for a democratic regional IGO” (Li 2016).
What we have learned from a constructivist perspective analysis of ASEAN is
that it functions under the principle of an adaptive organization, a strong antifragile
resilience. Southeast Asian regimes have maintained stability throughout periods of great
change in the world, and those that have exchanged forms of governances have shown
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the ability to do so in smooth transitions of power. Southeast Asia is not a region that
conforms to liberal democratic norms, but instead its form of modernizing is as
sufficiently adaptive authoritarianism, slow moving on environmental governance,
women's rights, civil society organizations, but still semi-tolerant and foreseeing enough
to be non-confrontational. While ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism is institutionally
weak, its very existence shows acknowledgment of the issues growing importance. The
focus remains on economic social rights as the means of raising standards across the
board, alleviating other issues.
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Chapter VIII: ASEAN as a Process
Insufficiencies
Realism, liberalism, and constructivism are considered the foremost paradigms
towards understanding international relations, and yet none of them can adequately
explain the intentions or reasoning and thus describe the contemporary institutions and
behavior of ASEAN. The fact that segments of each do, to a degree, accurately apply
promotes the notion for a more complex approach in the research. In this chapter I will
examine a paradigm-shifting method for utilizing tools from across the separate theories.
I will highlight some of the stronger signs of internal change. A strong factor in the
difficulty of studying ASEAN has been that the nature of the organization has evolved
consistently since its formation. Finally, I will put forth the notion of applying a multi-
theoretical approach that factors in the methodology for change used by the various
governments and societies within the region that have promoted their resilience.
A holistic approach
While the three dominant paradigms of international relations each have their
strengths, their inherent biases and focuses of study limit their applicability for cases such
as ASEAN, which does not line up with what either of the three theories state should be
the goals of the regional governments. More recently there have been researchers
proposing a more expansive scope of study. Rudra Sil and Peter Katzenstein propose the
notion of analytic eclecticism in their work Beyond Paradigms in which they describe a
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more coherent and systematic approach that integrates existing scholarship across the
theoretical scope. Promoting pluralism and tolerance in the academic debate and policy-
oriented research, the analytic eclectic approach is about making usable connections
among clusters of analyses that are functionally related but normally formulated in to
separate paradigms. “It rests on a pragmatic set of assumptions, downplays rigid
epistemic commitments, and focuses on the consequences of scholarship for concrete
dilemmas” (Sil and J. Katzenstein 2010, 2). This effort seeks to create more cohesive
explanations, as well as diminish the gap between academia and the policymakers with
more actionable studies. This approach is reliant upon the work that is generated within
the existing paradigms and research approaches. It does not seek to supplant them.
Rather, it seeks to establish the potential relevance of, as well as connections between,
various narratives created using what would otherwise be considered discrete and
incompatible approaches.
The concentration of each of the traditional theories limits their scopes, creating
blind spots, which is what the goal of analytic eclecticism seeks to overcome. This
approach examines how the various mechanisms used in the competing paradigms could
interact with each other and where it would be possible to combine efforts for practical
and scholarly use. Analytic eclecticism takes the approach of addressing problems as they
are experienced by political actors, rather than limiting the scope of the subject to fit
within the academic boundaries established by any one traditional paradigm. Previous
studies fall short in that they only examine the ontological and primary causes of
mechanisms while minimalizing other factors. This method differentiates itself from
other efforts, such as multi-method research or methodological triangulation, which
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primarily focus on complimenting results through various methods, instead concentrating
on the diversity of connections between different mechanisms and theories normally
studied in separate research methods. The approach promotes the construction of theories
that generate ‘pragmatic engagement’ towards the contemporary social conditions in
which world politics have emerged. Having a multi-methodical approach also serves to
bring awareness to the external environmental factors that influence an actor’s interests
and methods for their studies and to what degree does that impact manifest in their
findings.
In that it uses methods and tools from the other paradigms, eclecticism was not
created to replace any of them. Rather, it serves as a useful heuristic that offers more
expanded flexibility for applicable analyses than any one paradigm would be able to. This
focused goal of pragmatism towards creating actionable research requires there to be a
direct cause or issue of some import. “In the absence of a concern for framing one’s
research in such a way, eclectic scholarship will fare no better than paradigm-bound
scholarship” (Sil and J. Katzenstein 2010, 22), risking becoming overly concentrated with
the study rather than the utility, “academic theorizing will say more and more about less
and less.”
A new theory
ASEAN has gone through several milestones of development since its foundation
in 1967, a significant one being the signing of the charter in 2007. The adoption of more
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members and the formation of several regional political and economic forums, as well as
the internal and external pressures towards liberal efforts of democratization and human
rights, have altered the course of the RIGO from seeking to maintain economic and
regional relevance to now hosting some of the fastest growing economies in the world.
For much of its existence it was grounded around creating a modestly cohesive resistance
against the spread of communism in Asia, and now it hosts several communist members
including Viet Nam, whose fall to communism and subsequent invasion into Cambodia,
who has also since become a member, paralyzed the RIGO. Many scholars doubted the
organization’s longevity after its formation in 1967, and yet again questioned its
resilience after the end of the Cold War and the perception of an American withdrawal
from the region followed by the economic bubble bursting leading to a devastating
financial crisis. Though ASEAN has shown its fortitude in its adaptability to evolving
within a changing region, market, and political landscape. With the adoption of the
ASEAN Charter and the gradual establishment of the APSC, AEC, and ASCC, ASEAN
now appears more robust than ever.
In order to produce a better understanding of this unique regional organization we
must move away from the existing paradigm bound theories, which rely upon concepts,
foundational assumptions, and analytic principles to simply complex social phenomena,
and adopt a more pluralistic reasoning. “Such simplification can be fruitful and is often
unavoidable in light of practical research constraints, especially in relation to phenomena
on which there is little existing research” (Sil and J. Katzenstein 2010, 19). Grounded in
the methodological approach established with Sil and Katzenstein’s Analytic Eclecticism,
I propose the reactive isomorphic theory (RIT) as an analysis tool for a new approach to
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studying ASEAN. As I have established in previous chapters, ASEAN continues to defy
what the nature of a regional organization ought to be when governed through the lens of
international relations theories. Moreover, the institution continues to evolve and change
course. To what extent the direction is being led by states, social and political elites, or if
the cultural communities are driving the region needs to be further analyzed. If we are to
comprehend ASEAN, we must accept that it might not be fixed on a predetermined
course. Instead, we must come to the understanding that the fluidity of the organization
can serve as an indicator for the contemporary values throughout the greater region.
The hybridization of imitating foreign concepts into the various levels of society
while morphing them to be adoptable to existing cultures, mimetic isomorphism, and
how that progresses out on the local versus regional level, neo-contingency approach, is
the concentration of the reactive isomorphic theory that necessitates further study. A
central focus of RIT is the evolving nature of ASEAN over time, the adaptation process
that has led to its durability. The organization has shown at times that it could have, and
possibly still could, go down the road towards establishing a security network with
mutual defense agreements analogous to that of NATO, as one focused on the security
aspects of realist theory to show predisposition for, and yet it has not. The
collectivizing efforts created through free trade agreements and ARF have shown an
indication of some liberalist tendencies. There remains a lack of commonalities
between governments and cultures within the organization, highlighted by the
admittance of communist states, as well as the continued trepidation over implementing
regional institutions and interdependence that would potentially diminish sovereign
powers. Constructivism serves to observe the cultural interactions that have shaped the
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region but does little to create an actionable theory of institutional mechanics within
ASEAN that would serve policymakers.
What is ASEAN’s current trajectory? What are the goals of its members for the
association and the greater region? Are these goals compatible with those of the United
States, and regardless how best can the United States interact with ASEAN itself and as a
regional hub? Are there indications towards changing values that could alter ASEAN’s
efforts established in its charter? Given the absence of an accurate model, RIT seeks to
apply the multi-methodically tooled approach of analytic eclecticism towards promoting
a pluralistic view of ASEAN that could account for the shifting politics of the region
driven in often differing directions at the various social and political levels. The goal of
this new theoretical approach being to create a more cohesive understanding of the
dynamics of the organization, serving to facilitate foreign relations with Western
policymakers. Continuing efforts towards regional integration will play a large part
towards increasing the support for human rights as a new norm. That said, while
democratization is an essential support for human rights in the region, the presence of any
external pressure on Asian states to democratize would be drastically counterproductive,
leading to state collectively resisting such pressure. This occurred during the 1990s
‘Asian values’ debate. “A better policy is to quietly assist ASEAN members in
developing civil society and NGOs as well as support ASEAN with its effort to deepen
regional integration and advance the ASEAN community” (Ryu and Ortuoste 2014, 377-
378). The developing approach to issues such as human rights, opening economic
markets, and regional security illustrate an evolution within the Association of Southeast
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Asian Nations that is not captured through the fixed prisms of realism, liberalism, and
constructivism.
Acknowledging inconsistencies with paradigms
Security: neo-contingency & information signaling
The neo-contingency approach by Katsunori Sato and Michael Roy in their
article, Further Limits to Institutional Isomorphism? Introducing the 'Neo-contingency
Approach' to the Field of Community-Led Social Ventures, highlights the roles that,
“local contingencies, such as the external environment, leadership, and social capital,
play a role in influencing organizational culture in community-led social projects and,
in fact, the form that the social project takes” (Sato and Roy 2015). The neo-
contingency approach breaks from the notion that a single approach for an organization
works universally. It illustrates how organizations must adapt as needed in response to
current stimuli. The organization’s structure is always adapting, shifting policies in the
face of dilemmas on an as needed basis. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations has
maintained a loose cohesion; though formed in the 1960s, it was thirty years later that a
series of treaties and initiatives had pushed towards a more formative international
structure. The ASEAN Charter, the ASEAN Economic Community and the ASEAN
Political-Security Community have served to transition the assembly away from being a
non-binding political association to a more rules-based institution, establishing a more
effective organizational structure, the so-called ‘ASEAN Way.’
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ASEAN has reoriented itself many times over its four distinct phases. As with the
slow evolution towards the European Union, the first step was aimed more directly at
preventing conflict between its members than from external intrusion. One of the largest
shifts in the region during this period came from the United States normalizing relations
with mainland China, which lead to ASEAN beginning to reorient itself as a neutral
entity during the Cold War. It was the American withdrawal from South Viet Nam, and
its subsequent fall to communist forces sending ripples of fear throughout the region, that
spurred the next phase of development. The Bali Concord I and the TAC were significant
diplomatic milestones that led to the formation of the ASEAN Secretariat and reaffirmed
the commitment to non-interference and peaceful resolution of disputes. Almost
immediately these ideologies were put to the test as Viet Nam invaded neighboring
Cambodia and sought to overthrow the Khmer Rouge regime. The Paris Peace
Conferences signified a substantial diplomatic victory for ASEAN as it was able to bring
the conflict to an end without resorting to military intervention.
The end of the Cold War and the spread of globalization required ASEAN to once
again reinvent itself. No longer a collection of states, unified in response to a potential
communist incursion, the RIGO now opened itself up to membership for states such as
Viet Nam that are still communist and had antagonized unrest in the region, resulting in
the association doubling its original size. This phase was focused on diplomatic
engagement, primarily through the creation of ARF, and the rapid economic expansion in
the region. When the economic bubble burst, each of the states struggled to find their
own solution to the crisis with little cooperative efforts succeeding, and the eventual need
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for outside economic support from the IMF resulting in significant internal loss of pride.
The regional organization failed to be self-sufficient.
The lessons from these events have culminated into the current phase where we
see ASEAN slowly formalizing its structure under the ASEAN Charter and the gradual
creation of its pillar communities for security, economics, and cultural needs. This is a
period of solidification after its rapid growth as it seeks to politically adapt to the new
social and international expectations. While not a security community from a realist
prospective, with few indications of a cohesive RIGO-wide security establishment, there
are growing indications towards more serious defensive treaties being formed throughout
the region, a ‘noodle bowl’ of security pacts. While in some regards ASEAN has
attempted to mimic certain aspects of other regional organizations, when it comes to
security matters the organization remains limited to reactionary measures. Where the
European Union has gradually increased levels of inter-service cooperation, including
joint operations and procurement programs, ASEAN has fixated around non-aggression
pledges both between member and non-member states. Previous efforts to organize a
security pact, namely the ill-fated Southeast Asian Treaty Organization, or other efforts to
formalize a structure within ASEAN, such as Malaysia’s motion to create a peacekeeping
force for the region, have all failed due to lack of interest and commitment in the region
to allow foreign forces on their soil. The potential for an intra-ASEAN conflict is
crippling to get any initiative beyond mere theory.
Since the ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting, beginning in 2006, there have
been slow efforts made towards frame working for future humanitarian assistance and
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disaster relief operations. The results of these efforts continue to be criticized though after
lackluster and delayed responses in the wake of natural disasters. While there have been
some efforts to coordinate faster reactions in response to widespread public criticism, the
difficulties over multinational efforts interfering with sovereignty remains an extremely
difficult issue. Recent moves to pre-position supplies will help local aid groups while
larger relief efforts can be formalized. With the increasing risk posed by climate change
and sea levels rising, these initiatives will be tested. This neo-contingency approach to
handle each event as a unique occurrence leads to an often delayed and muted manner
from the lowest effective level of governance possible. There has been minimal effort
placed on creating overarching strategic planning. Joint training between coast guards
have occurred, again between member and non-member states, but these efforts are more
diplomatic than tactical.
Where the RIGO has improved its coordination is through information sharing. At
the 8th ADMM in 2014, the Direct Communications Link was adopted, its role to
promote response coordination in emergencies, principally with maritime security. This
has come in response to the increasingly inter-state responses required from violations of
territorial waters from fishing vessels, growing levels of piracy, and the expanding
presence of the Chinese naval and maritime fleets. This communication link will serve as
a confidence building measure between the states that could foster some cooperated
responses in time. Communication between members is critical, not only for security, but
also to maintain diplomatic cohesion in the region. Information sharing leads to clear
signalling for states in the region.
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The requirement of unanimity in ASEAN puts great stress on members to
maintain agreement with one another, even when it goes against their individual
preferences. But that self-restraint can only be stretched so far, as with the case of the
Philippine’s very vocal distancing from the United States and shift towards China, a
move that broke the group’s norm of neutrality and led to great friction amongst the
members who were not used to division. Political shifts within ASEAN’s position signal
throughout the region. Uncertainty about its goals and direction can disrupt diplomatic
efforts. ASEAN’s future actions are based off previous efforts, more so than any long-
term objective goals. This is a slow-moving organization; big shifts do not happen
quickly without cause.
Economics: Institutionalized isomorphism
‘Isomorphic adaption’ is a strategy used when the call for change is strong, so the
state will choose to mimic a foreign government that’s values and structure resemble the
prevailing system, with many of the changes being drawn out over time and mostly
ceremonial. ‘Localization’ is a controlling effort towards influencing the implementation
of new systems, attempting to retain existing values and orthodoxy while still adapting to
a new system. A ‘transformation’ represents a complete change of the norms and identity;
this usually happens after a significant crisis that highlights the failings of the existing
paradigms. ASEAN has shown extents of mimetic isomorphism at the institutional level,
as shown by Hiro Katsumata in Mimetic adoption and norm diffusion: 'Western' security
cooperation in Southeast Asia? Mimetic isomorphism is the behavior of an organization
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to mimic external institutions as a means of garnering legitimacy, though this behavior
should be distinguished from policy emulation, which is used to resolve specific
problems.
A central mission of ARF was to promote preventative diplomacy in the region, to
establish a forum to resolve disputes before they escalated. This collective approach was
inspired in part by European programs. “The Southeast Asians had been inspired by
'common security' thinking, developed in the CSCE (Commission on Security and
Cooperation in Europe) process. Such thinking is based on the view that regional security
is indivisible and can be achieved only through cooperative undertaking” (Katsumata
2011, 570). In the 1990s there were several discussions on the official level of
implementing an Asian form of the CSCE, put forward by Australia and later security
cooperation based off the lessons learned by European efforts was explored by
Singapore.
ASEAN has often looked to the European Union for inspiration, but its goals have
never been so entwined as the EU’s efforts towards integration. Whether this reflects the
craving of European’s economic achievements or due to lasting effects on institutional
direction left over from the colonial imprinting is open to interpretation. This is repeated
on the socio-cultural level as Western trends remain popular in Asia, not only in
entertainment but to an extent liberal values towards gender equality and human rights
have begun to take hold. From my own experience interning in the Quang Nam province
of Viet Nam, one of my tasks was to teach English lessons to city officials or when
visiting local universities. I was frequently questioned by women over the role of women
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in the United States regarding the balance of gender roles between both the household
labors and presence in business, much to the obvious chagrin of their male counterparts.
Though this is a small sample size, the desire to replicate Western practices was near
universal in this regard as there was a desire for change that will butt up against
conservative traditions.
Just as the European Union has expanded to become not only a central hub of the
region but a global economic powerhouse, ASEAN has made timid efforts towards
similar goals while maintaining restrictions on sovereign integration. The achievement of
the Euro currency led to similar aspirations with a potential Asian Monetary Unit, though
this effort has gained little traction. Efforts towards integration have been extremely slow
as, unlike the Europeans, there has never been a true long-term plan towards that level of
cohesion. The organization adopts practices as needed in response to changing demands,
and if successful those efforts are shared to the rest of the members, though adoption
comes in a localized form if at all. The most significant coordinated effort though has
been the efforts of regional diplomatic and economic forums, seeking to firmly cement
their position as the central hub, as has the EU for Europe. With the Declaration of
ASEAN Concord II (Bali Concord II), ASEAN stated its intent to establish three
communities that would be the pillars of the organization based on political and security
cooperation, economic cooperation, and socio-cultural cooperation. These three
institutions resemble those of the EU: The Pillar of Common Foreign and Security
Policy, the Community Pillar, and the Pillar of Police and Judicial Cooperation. Regional
values in East Asia prevent the possibilities for regional courts comparable to the
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Europeans, but its members have been accepting of the role of more international judicial
systems, such as the International Criminal Court or the Permanent Court of Arbitration.
Acharya explores ASEAN’s role in the region’s institution-building efforts,
including the ASEAN Regional Forum, ASEAN-Plus-Three, Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation, and the East Asia Summit. While ASEAN does act as the role of a ‘hub’ for
relations with other organizations, it does not seek nor have the structural capability to
take a leadership role of a wider regional institution. That many efforts and initiatives
have failed, such as with the defunct SEATO, gives weight to the argument that the
organization does not have the capability for greater cohesion. “Yet in reality, the biggest
blow to the ASEAN Way … comes from the ASEAN members themselves. The damage
to the ASEAN Way is deliberate and self-inflicted act, a fact little recognized in the
academic writings on ASEAN” (Acharya 2009, 493). As recognized by Jurgen in The
limits of democratizing interest representation: ASEAN’s regional corporatism and
normative challenges, states have resisted the persistent international and domestic
pressures for democratizing regional governance through several strategies that include
rejection, isomorphic adaptation, and localization. The resistance to new ideas is
influenced by the region’s ‘cognitive prior,’ the region’s existing norms and values in the
collective memory, which mold what is expected of the state and society from established
tradition. This creates a degree of permanence that can make it very difficult for new
norms to take hold without prolonged enforcement. “During its term as ASEAN Chair,
the Indonesian government has practiced greater participatory openness than most Chairs
before, but with the Chair passing over to less democratic member countries, this
momentum may get lost” (Rüland 2014, 256) While change is possible, it will have to
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come from internal pressure and not solely external influence. The multiple strategies
being utilized have largely kept intact its cognitive prior, which rests in a blending of
imported European and older local ideas from the region. Given the pervasive resilience
of this cognitive prior, the prospects for a significant shift towards a liberal-pluralist
transformation of ASEAN’s institutions remains unlikely.
ASEAN has adopted many similar traits of European regionalism that have served
to create legitimacy as an international actor seeking to solidify its status as a central hub
throughout the region. At the state and local levels though, governments have maintained
distinctly local cultural values and practices and to date have either repressed or mitigated
many social efforts towards adoption of western liberal practices. As Katsumata notes,
“local actors may voluntarily adopt external norms for the sake of legitimacy, even if the
new norms compete with existing ones” (Katsumata 2011, 576). These are methods
commonly practiced by ASEAN as it slowly develops, even in the absence of great
power politics or transnational struggles that normally define periods of normative
change.
Norms and values: adaptiveness & antifragility
The antifragile theory by Nassim Taleb distinguishes between a robust system and
an antifragile one. Where a robust system might be able to weather many events or crises,
inevitably it faces a large enough hurdle that will force a significant shift to overcome.
The advantages of an antifragile system are that its multifaceted approach takes small
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diverse steps towards evolution. It can adapt faster to failure than more singular efforts,
whose failures could prove significantly more detrimental. In Antifragile: Things That
Gain from Disorder, Taleb illustrates an antifragile as the mythical Hydra, which
responds to decapitation by growing two new heads in its place. “Some things benefit
from shocks; they thrive and grow when exposed to volatility, randomness, disorder, and
stressors and love adventure, risk, and uncertainty. Yet, in spite of the ubiquity of the
phenomenon, there is no word for the exact opposite of fragile” (Taleb 2012, 2). Taleb
terms this antifragile, a trait which goes beyond resilience or robustness. Where a
resilient system resists shocks and stays the same, an antifragile system improves. An
antifragile system responds well to the randomness of the world. It can adapt to the
uncertain. It is a living organism that evolves to meet the world around it rather than stay
inert and resilient to change.
Regional governments have displayed several methods to placate the populace.
Since its original formation, ASEAN has evolved through several distinct phases as it
adapts to the changing global norms. The end of the Cold War and the rise of
globalization have required significant shifts in the direction of the RIGO, but at its core
the foundation has remained solid, fixed in place. One of the more significant indicators
of ASEAN’s ability of adaptiveness in the last few decades has been its response to the
growing call towards human rights. This is a slow-moving organization that shifts just
enough to placate social unrest without uprooting the underlying foundations of the
institutions. In doing so, ASEAN has remained remarkably adaptable. ‘A tongue but no
teeth?’: The emergence of a regional human rights mechanism in the Asia Pacific region
by Andrea Durbach, Catherine Renshaw, and Andrew Byrnes explores how the 2007
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signing of the Charter of the Association of South East Asian Nations, was intended to
“strengthen democracy, enhance good governance and the rule of law, and to promote
and protect human rights and freedoms” (Durbach, Renshaw and Byrnes 2011, 212) in its
members and throughout the region. Yet they find that efforts towards safeguarding
human rights have come with much resistance as many member states are hesitant
towards changes in social values and policies that lessen their state sovereignty. While
there have been modest moves towards the establishment of regional mechanisms, these
efforts shift between resistance and hesitant endorsement. Debates over values and
sovereignty, strong governance and individual rights, have continued to frustrate any
comprehensive effort towards implementation of a regional body since the inception of
the in 1996. “At the same time, there has been significant growth in the number of
national human rights institutions across the region” (Durbach, Renshaw and Byrnes
2011, 212).
The establishment of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations’
Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR) was a strong step towards
embracing what are increasingly becoming international norms and values through the
establishment of multiple regional human rights mechanisms (RHRM), such as the
ASEAN Human Rights Body (AHRB). Given the history of poor human rights records in
many of the members, though, it is a surprising move for the organization. From its origin
in 1967 through the 1990s, no mention of human rights as an issue existed within the
institution’s priorities as most ASEAN members opposed the universal application of
human rights. Some policymakers viewed the suppression of domestic dissent provided
the socio-political stability needed for economic development. The established norms of
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state sovereignty and non-interference blocked any significant development of human
rights. A strong rationale for these changes has come from both the regional and domestic
levels with the increasing stages of regional integration coupled with democratization in
several states. The increasing regional integration has led to the erosion of old norms,
allowing for modern values of good governance and increased accountability. This
created the context for human rights issues and institutions to be discussed and begin to
develop. The authors ̧Yongwook Ryu and Maria Ortuoste, assert in Democratization,
regional integration, and human rights: the case of the ASEAN intergovernmental
commission on human rights that while democratization efforts continue in ASEAN and
the region, the efforts remain tentative. Events such as the 2006 military coup in Thailand
have made some actors in the region hesitant to press for further democratization. While
previously many had considered the march towards democratization a fixed path, the
events in Thailand and the reversal of democratization serves to show just how tenuous
foundations are for democracy in the region. Some still doubt if a democratic form of
government is indeed necessary for political stability and economic development, leaving
many questions over human rights role in the region. “Further development in regional
democratization would likely lead to a strengthening of the AICHR and improvement of
human rights” (Ryu and Ortuoste 2014, 377). Historically democracies can take several
generations before truly solidifying to a culture that had heretofore not been practiced,
and with the recent economic events, instability will weaken fledgling efforts. It is
unclear though whether the organization as a whole wishes to advance these efforts.
Though there was an effort by Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand
to create a regional commission, potentially even a human rights court, this was met with
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strong trepidation by other states and to date no ASEAN institution has been established.
This fueled growing fears that the ASEAN Charter’s promotion of human rights was
more into political rhetoric than any real transformation. The strongest prevailing effort
has come from the APF of National Human Rights Institutions, but even those efforts are
viewed with skepticism. There are concerns that this effort will be implemented in a way
as to evade the application of universal human rights in favor of regional and national
values. Simon Tay, Chairman of the Singapore Institute of International Affairs and Co-
Chair of the Workshop on the ASEAN Regional Human Rights Mechanism emphasized
several key points of contention within the association which continue to undermine
efforts towards the establishment of the ASEAN Human Rights Body. He acknowledges
the concerns over whether the AHRB should be comprised of governmental officials who
may not pursue changes that risk friendly relations as opposed to independent experts
who could be critical of human rights violations. Whether the body should have
investigative powers into complaints throughout the region or to serve as a monitoring
tool. And to what degree can a minority of ASEAN states push for this initiative given
the lack of full support. The efforts by Indonesia towards democratization have been very
influential though, as it has been seen as the ‘informal leader’ within ASEAN. In the
early 2000s, Indonesia began to strongly promote for the creation of a regional human
rights mechanic as being critical for the future of the greater association. The president at
the time, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, had been a strong proponent for the AICHR.
“Indonesia was so insistent on ASEAN promoting human rights and democracy that it
signed the ASEAN Charter on the condition that such activities will be implemented by
the organization” (Ryu and Ortuoste 2014, 369).
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This acknowledgment of the public call towards human rights with the creation of
the AICHR serves to raise further awareness of the issue, and yet through the limited
capability and resources given to it indicates that for now this is serving more to pacify
discontent. Institutions like this within ASEAN are indicative of the association’s
antifragility in response to changing times. By taking small diverse iterative steps it
remains structurally sound and yet capable of changing itself when necessary. Despite
repeated proclamations of its imminent demise or obsolescence, ASEAN continues to
adapt and evolve just enough to remain a prominent fixture of the region. It does not
evolve to thrive but to continue on in the face of new challenges. This is causal to the
unpredictable nature, it will respond as needed to each new stimulus.
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Chapter IX: Implications for U.S. Policy Towards ASEAN
Cold War mentalities do not fit this institution
The ‘Pivot to Asia’ for the United States proposed by President Obama early in
his first term has, in fact, made the Western Pacific more unstable and given false
assurance to America’s allies and partners. In Rebalancing or De-Balancing: U.S. Pivot
and East Asian Order, Wei Ling posits that, while originally intended as an effort to open
the possibility of a greater cooperation initiative between the United States and China, it
instead has become “a balance-of-power, especially military power, situation” (Ling
2013, 148). With a growing mistrust towards China, the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations finds its neutrality being tested, pressured into siding with the United States, a
move which could further destabilize the region. While the organization as a whole has
long claimed neutrality as a central tenant, many of the members of ASEAN have
bilateral defensive ties with Western powers such as the United States, which were
‘grandfathered’ in and thus remain in effect.
The change in policy has served to reinvigorate America’s involvement in the
Indo-Pacific discussion, and its added military presence has reassured many of its allies.
Yet this effort to balance the region with China has brought bilateral relations to a new
low and forced many of the smaller powers into picking sides, a dilemma that has
“disrupted ongoing regional processes” (Ling 2013, 152). A significant risk to peace is
the fear that a smaller power will take on a strong stance against China under the
assumption that the United States will stand by it, even militarily. While neutrality has
been a strong principle in the RIGO’s identity, to ASEAN countries, the pivot by the
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United States to counterbalance China’s influence in the region has forced them into a
position of having to take sides. ASEAN has sought to balance its relations between the
regional powers well enough to remain institutionally central and has benefited
enormously from regional integration efforts. “Once it had to take sides between China
and the United States, not only would the balance be tipped, but ASEAN itself would
lose its identity and value” (Ling 2013, 152). Taking a more liberal power-sharing view
on the region, T. J. Pempel shows in More Pax, Less Americana in Asia that there are
great possibilities from cooperation and mutual benefit to participating parties. While this
may come at the expense of American policy dominance in the region, that does not
automatically mean the new values would be counter to Washington, and certainly not
necessarily hostile. The region would be self-reliant for security and stability, and no
longer reliant upon the United and its priorities. The regional economic and political
systems that were established by the United States after the Second World War are still in
place but going forward the regional actors may be able to take hold of it themselves.
“The final result may not be a ‘Pax Americana’ in its most unilateral form, but it would
represent an order that would be highly compatible with America’s long-term interests”
(Pempel 2010, 484). Though shifting values in Washington only serve to create unease
amongst its Asian partners as concern over a more isolationist America would have
sweeping repercussions throughout the region. The current administration’s declaration
of an ‘America First’ policy and withdrawal from the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership
has led to anxiety of a greater American withdrawal. The multilateral trade agreement
was reshaped without the United States, with China taking the role as the dominant
proponent.
127
The United States’ efforts to create a stronger community between states in the
region, the intent being to balance China’s growing power, has justifiably given the
Chinese government the impression that America’s policy is that of containment, as was
the political policy with the Soviet Union during the Cold War. ASEAN states seek to
maintain their claim of neutrality, in part due to fear of economic reprisals from China,
yet they still seek to ensure American assistance. “Ideally, ASEAN would have the
United States Navy steam in force into the South China Sea to maintain the peace, while
ASEAN then clucks disapprovingly from the sidelines and reassures the Chinese that it
had nothing to do with it. Intellectually, of course, ASEAN knows that it has to do better
than that” (Dillon 2011, 61).
The United States has been a strong advocate for both regionalism and
multilateralism. After the Second World War, it was a supporter of efforts to coordinate
defense and economic integration through the Treaty of Brussels, later with the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Economic Council; these efforts laid
down the framework towards the European Union. This has served the United States well
as over time the tensions defused in Europe, uniting against a common enemy during the
Cold War, leading to an increased economic production that would benefit Americans
through trade. In East Asia, the United States’ approach was through a series of bilateral
relationships to gain influence throughout the region, instilling a ‘hub and spokes’ model
with Australia, Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Thailand. “Bilateral
arrangements to be easier to arrange than multilateral ones; stronger and more resourceful
countries find them preferable because they tend to gain better terms than those of
multilateral forums, with their checks and balances” (Ganesan and Amer 2010, 16).
128
Regionalism and bilateralism/multilateralism each have their weaknesses. States must
weigh heavily on which agreements give them the most gains, politically and
economically, and if the risks of collectivizing are worth the threat of shared burdens.
ASEAN is in a truly unique positions, as an amalgamation of ten small states that operate
by consensus and have pledged non-violence offers a degree of stability in a region with
multiple big power rivals. “ASEAN will never be a titan like China, Japan, India, or
Russia. But its weakness in the traditional power sense allows ASEAN to play a vital and
irreplaceable role. Only ASEAN can call all the big powers to the table for the yearly
East Asia Summit meetings” (Hachigan 2017).
U.S. policies towards ASEAN in future
With faults being evident in past policy efforts by the United States in the region,
as well as the theories applied towards creating our conception of how ASEAN should
function, it is clear that new approaches need to be made going forward to shape future
American efforts. As the United States continues to evolve its policy goals for East Asia,
having a clearer understanding of ASEAN’s role in the region is critically advantageous.
Under the Obama administration efforts were made to enhance relations with ASEAN,
becoming the first non-member state to open a mission dedicated to ASEAN in Jakarta.
The United States has also expanded its advising role in ARF, as well as continuing
efforts to enhance the region’s institutional preparedness for disaster management. These
are good, positive steps to raise America’s presence in the region, but it must understand
the slow-moving nature of politics on the ground. Yet there have been major setbacks,
129
including the sudden spat between the Obama and Duterte administrations’ regarding
human rights and combating the narcotic epidemic. The TPP was an overly ambitious
project and the abrupt withdrawal by the Trump administration left Asian partners
confused and shaken. The United States must be slow and methodical going forward to
repair its relationships, and principles need to be considered.
Security
Since its creation ASEAN has taken a non-confrontational approach to conflicts,
seeking to use diplomatic pressures to resolve disputes. The TAC demonstrates both the
commitment to peace between Southeast Asian states as well as the association’s
diplomatic outreach. As of 2018 the treaty has extended beyond the original five
members of ASEAN to now include thirty-four states and unions. While this has served
to improve relations between many states, most of this has been between ASEAN
members. Outside of the RIGO there are many members to TAC who demonstrate
increasing levels of friction if not outright hostility between each other. Few, if any, view
North Korea and the United States’ pledges to peace in the region as binding constraints
that will stave off hostilities. The same could be said of India and Pakistan. This treaty
serves as a pledge, or hope, rather than any form of enforceable pact.
There is no elaborate security agreement in place or any greater agenda for a
regional security organization planned out, instead ASEAN responds to each event as
they occur. Through neo-contingency we see that to date member states have responded
130
to events individually, or when absolutely necessary they form local agreements for inter-
state cooperation in order to address only the specific issue. This is an as needed ad-hoc
policy with only the most extreme of circumstances requiring greater levels of
cooperation and planning, as we are starting to see with the increasing costs of post-
disaster HADR efforts leading to the formation of the AHA Center. The association
learns from prior efforts in order to enable better responses in future events, but that does
not mean they actively seek preparations or arrangements between states for security
needs outside of initiatives such as the ADMM, and more recently the ADMM-Plus,
which again focuses more on improving diplomatic relations over strategic planning for
regional security.
ASEAN navies are modernizing, and the confidence building efforts from the
ADMMs have value in establishing greater levels of cooperation but without stronger
trust and leadership there will not be a shift towards security agreements. The failings of
SEATO were numerous. Chief among them was lack of commitment by all parties. It was
clear that the United States was placing its weight behind NATO and the EU with its
Pacific focus aimed at Japan, the Korean Peninsula, and for a time Viet Nam. While the
organization needed far more than just stronger support from a great power state, it was
too early into the establishment of ASEAN to extend that cooperation into a military
alliance. There remains a lack of will towards recreating one. It does not currently fit into
their contingency based paradigm. If the United States seeks to control the direction of
these events, it needs to play a more active role. Going back to SEATO and the earlier
phases of ASEAN, an American presence was reassuring towards regional stability as
long as its Asian partners could believe it to be a long-term commitment. Even though
131
ASEAN maintains neutrality, they need to be made aware of the American commitment
to the region, even in the face of near-competitor challengers. I am not proposing a
confrontationality policy, but an active engagement in the region and with ASEAN as
events manifest.
Successful efforts, such as the powerful imagery of American response to
Typhoon Haiyan’s devastation in the Philippines in 2013 can shape lasting impressions in
the region. “About 50 U.S. ships and aircraft have been mobilized in the disaster zone,
including 10 C-130 transport planes, 12 V-22 Ospreys and 14 Seahawk helicopters air-
dropping supplies from an aircraft carrier” (Mogato and Belford 2013). The American
vehicles were more capable than those used by local government forces, able to reach
farther and faster to remote villages. In addition to the military response, other agencies
such as the U.S. State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development
also contributed their resources. Demonstrated proof of American capability and more
importantly commitment will serve to gain traction in being factored into ASEAN
planning. ASEAN will continue its ad-hoc efforts, but if United States involvement
continuously shows positive results it will become increasingly relied upon.
Washington needs to establish a firm policy of active engagement and strong lines
of communication with ASEAN. Responding to crises serves to win the hearts and
minds, but if the United States wants to direct the region’s trajectory it needs to place
itself in the region. When the Philippines won its legal dispute with China, it did not seek
to actively enforce it. This could be rooted in lack of capability or in political policy
shifts under the incoming Duterte administration. The active presence of the United
132
States Navy, acting in the role of maintaining international law of the sea through
Freedom of Navigation missions served to show that it was dedicated to the region. That
the Trump administration temporarily suspended these operations in early 2017 only
serves to raise doubt from ASEAN.
Economics
The Trans-Pacific Partnership was too lofty of a goal based on ASEAN’s iterative
isomorphic nature. While it has increasingly adopted multilateral over bilateral free trade
agreements, slowly expanding its noodle bowl, the scope of the TPP was too aggressive
for it to instigate. American guidance was a driving force for the initiative, and the near
collapse of the agreement after the United States withdrew highlights the need for a
strong advocate. In this instance, China was eager to step in and overtake the trade talks
and usurp America’s position. It was predictable that in the absence of a great power
another would step in and seize the reigns. China has made its position clear that it is
strategically ready to replace the United States in regions it is withdrawing. Left to its
own devices, ASEAN will restrict initiatives to smaller iterative efforts that have near
term objectives, those that will advance its position without opening it up to unnecessary
risks.
Over the last decade China has undertaken increasing economic initiatives
throughout the developing world. Their motives are clear. They are securing access to
economic resources by building up local infrastructure, and their policy of non-
133
interference with local government policies that the West finds off-putting puts it at a
strong advantage in gaining access over the United States. Throughout Asia, China’s One
Belt One Road Initiative is going to establish far greater economic efficiency through
these often massive investments in local infrastructure. These investments win over local
support because they can see direct tangible benefits, whereas the TPP was so abstract
that even within the United States the public was confused and apprehensive to the
agreement. That cannot be the case if America wants to gain stronger support in the
region.
Heavy investments are an easy solution. They create a perception on the local
level of American support, like the photos of U.S. Marines airlifting in food and medical
supplies. The gains from local projects must be clear and direct. Gaining support for
larger investments overseas is a difficult proposition and becoming increasingly more
contentious. Smaller projects, though not as impactful, in greater amounts would allow
for a greater reach through various communities and would keep with the small iterative
approach preferred by ASEAN governments. The United States was willing to compete
with the Soviet Union for ideological control of many regions, but now it finds itself
competing with a large power state that does not seek to only do business with states that
share like-minded politics, and so to meet this new world order the United States cannot
afford to be so particular. That said, the United States has a long history of supporting
governments only because of their anti-communistic positions, when we should have
taken a much harder glance at their own domestic practices instead. An American
presence can serve to steer political directions at the local level, pushing for gradual
iterative changes over time.
134
Human rights
The same approach is applicable in regard to ASEAN’s position on issues of
social norms. It will continue to make gradual steps as it seeks to accommodate imminent
social changes while stopping short of instigating further changes or confrontations when
at all avoidable. A steady American presence in the region can serve to sustain pressure
on governments of the value of adopting liberal norms. The United States has had notable
success in this regard throughout East Asia, most notably with the evolutions in Japanese
and South Korean societies. ASEAN governments will maintain policies that continue the
region’s antifragile nature, and so a guiding hand seeking to promote the advantages of
change need not focus on economic growth, but over the long-term resilience of Western
liberal practices.
It is important to note that the ASEAN governments are not necessarily resistant
to normative changes, but they seek to do them in the same gradual iterative nature seen
in other policy making processes. The nature of antifragility is the adoption of small
diverse changes, this allows successful ones to be found and adopted while minimizing
potential risks of failed changes. There have been inroads made towards giving a greater
voice to CSOs on issues such as human rights, but given the tumultuous social and
political uprisings throughout much of the Middle East, in part linked to civil liberties,
governments within ASEAN are apprehensive on the best approach to the issue. They
seek a slow but steady trickle of changes to prevent the dam from bursting. Foreign
involvement to bolster the CSOs will likely cause them to be alienated from their local
135
governments, a more direct communication directly with the governments towards the
capabilities of these CSOs to resolve social issues on a local level without needing to
expend provincial resources through funds or personnel. Giving local teams the
permission to address issues will allow for the greater ASEAN to view which efforts are,
or not, successful, thus continuing its antifragile practices.
An American presence serves to facilitate cultural exchanges of ideas and values.
Through the Viet Nam-to-Oregon Initiative, I have experienced firsthand the eager
curiosity towards Western values. This program is also serving to advance economic
trade and educational opportunities. Cultural exchanges will continue to increase the
curiosity and eventual call for normative changes, and so exchange programs through
local and state officials will serve to raise awareness of the advantages of adoption and
the risks of ignoring the call for change. There are many programs such as this already
operating, they need to be given greater funding in the U.S. and given greater access
within ASEAN.
A Final Thought
The goal of this thesis has been to demonstrate the value in expanding
involvement in the region. ASEAN redefines the paradigms of what the role of a regional
organization is, and while each of the existing dominant international relations theories
do bring significant levels of knowledge to bare, they each suffer from their own inherent
limitations. I propose the reactive isomorphic theory as a tool to incorporate the lessons
136
learned from these theories by bringing awareness of these gaps. From the realist’s
notions of establishing a security infrastructure, to liberalism’s emphasis on relying upon
integrating infrastructures for expanding economic trade, or constructivist’s promotion of
a cultural identity for the greater region, none of these archetypes resemble the
organization that ASEAN has evolved into. Focusing on ASEAN’s policies and actions
has demonstrated a behavior of neo-contingency, institutional isomorphism, and adaptive
antifragile through which the regional organization has continued to evolve into a vastly
different organization than what it originally was when the original five members focused
more on securing peaceful relations amongst each other and the prevention of the spread
of communism, into the economically minded inclusive institution it is today.
Meaningful programs that give tangible benefits to locals have a strong impact on
lasting sentiments, such as expanding the efforts to remove toxins left behind after
American involvement in Viet Nam. These initiatives not only serve to improve bonds
with locals, but it also raises accountability levels for government cleanups throughout
the region. This should go hand-in-hand with the infrastructure change initiatives.
Promoting cleaner practices and renewable energies can be a costly and complicated
transition, often ignored until absolutely necessary. By seeking to sponsor these shifts, it
will aid local economies and put an American face on something they see directly
benefiting them. The crucial theme is to maintain a visible and positive American
presence within Southeast Asia. Promoting ideas without forcing change will allow the
ASEAN governments the ability to adapt and adopt normative changes. Some practices
will serve better in some provinces than others as the separate governments attempt
various alterations. The continued involvement by the United States, through trust-
137
building efforts and economic initiatives, will serve to establish a durable value to its
message in the region.
138
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